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Three on a Couch

  • 1966
  • Approved
  • 1h 49m
IMDb RATING
5.8/10
1.3K
YOUR RATING
Janet Leigh and Jerry Lewis in Three on a Couch (1966)
Official Trailer
Play trailer2:44
1 Video
37 Photos
SlapstickComedyRomance

A portrait artist wants to take his psychiatrist fiancee with him to Paris. But she refuses to leave her 3 man-hating female patients. So, he disguises himself as three different men in an e... Read allA portrait artist wants to take his psychiatrist fiancee with him to Paris. But she refuses to leave her 3 man-hating female patients. So, he disguises himself as three different men in an effort to cure the patients so she can go along.A portrait artist wants to take his psychiatrist fiancee with him to Paris. But she refuses to leave her 3 man-hating female patients. So, he disguises himself as three different men in an effort to cure the patients so she can go along.

  • Director
    • Jerry Lewis
  • Writers
    • Bob Ross
    • Samuel A. Taylor
    • Arne Sultan
  • Stars
    • Jerry Lewis
    • Janet Leigh
    • Mary Ann Mobley
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.8/10
    1.3K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Jerry Lewis
    • Writers
      • Bob Ross
      • Samuel A. Taylor
      • Arne Sultan
    • Stars
      • Jerry Lewis
      • Janet Leigh
      • Mary Ann Mobley
    • 28User reviews
    • 15Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Three on a Couch
    Trailer 2:44
    Three on a Couch

    Photos37

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    Top cast71

    Edit
    Jerry Lewis
    Jerry Lewis
    • Christopher Pride…
    Janet Leigh
    Janet Leigh
    • Dr. Elizabeth Acord
    Mary Ann Mobley
    Mary Ann Mobley
    • Susan Manning
    Gila Golan
    Gila Golan
    • Anna Jacque
    Leslie Parrish
    Leslie Parrish
    • Mary Lou Mauve
    James Best
    James Best
    • Dr. Ben Mizer
    Kathleen Freeman
    Kathleen Freeman
    • Murphy
    Jesslyn Fax
    Jesslyn Fax
    • Rich Lady
    Buddy Lester
    Buddy Lester
    • The Drunk
    Renie Riano
    Renie Riano
    • Old Woman
    Renzo Cesana
    Renzo Cesana
    • The Ambassador
    Fritz Feld
    Fritz Feld
    • The Attaché
    Carol Anderson
    • Lingerie Model
    • (uncredited)
    Richard Angarola
    Richard Angarola
    • Handsome Man
    • (uncredited)
    Danny Arnold
    • Man with Nana
    • (uncredited)
    Nick Borgani
    Nick Borgani
    • Party Guest
    • (uncredited)
    Barbara Burgess
    • Lingerie Model
    • (uncredited)
    Chris Carter
    • Woman
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Jerry Lewis
    • Writers
      • Bob Ross
      • Samuel A. Taylor
      • Arne Sultan
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews28

    5.81.2K
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    Featured reviews

    9Dick-42

    Hilarious. but you may hate it!

    Inane, but not as much so as you expect from Lewis. Jerry even plays a reasonably intelligent and talented character in this one. Absolutely hilarious in many spots, even when gags are being milked. You miss stuff you can't see through the tears! A wonderful movie -- perhaps Jerry's very best!
    vchimpanzee

    Starts slow but ends up hilarious

    Artist Christopher Pride has won a contest to paint a mural in Paris. He shows up to collect his award from the diplomats in an office, with the nervous energy one would expect from Jerry Lewis. Just one problem: he's about to get married to Elizabeth, a psychiatrist in a Los Angeles office building which must be about the size of the Empire State Building, judging from the number of psychiatrists in the building directory. If they get married, Elizabeth will have to accompany Christopher to Paris.

    Elizabeth can take time off from some of her patients, but three of them will be devastated if she has to leave them. Mary Lou has a Southern accent and likes insects. Anna sounds European and sells perfume in a department store, but she likes cowboys. Susan is an exercise nut (she can't just lie on the couch; she must always be working out). All three have problems with men and need to talk to Elizabeth constantly about them.

    Christopher's best friend Ben, an obstetrician, comes up with an interesting idea. What if Christopher goes out with each girl, portraying their ideal man? It might work. I know it'll work for the audience.

    Ringo Raintree shows up at Anna's workplace with a cigar in his mouth. The poor man struggles with that cigar but somehow always manages to keep it in his mouth while talking up a storm about being the greatest rancher west of Chicago. Let's just hope he never has to prove his ability in, say, a rodeo.

    Warren tries to keep up with Susan on the jogging trail. I wasn't aware people jogged in 1965, but Susan is kind of unusual.

    And one of the movie's funniest scenes, and certainly one of Lewis' most hilarious moments, comes when Heather persuades Mary Lou to visit her very shy zoologist brother Rutherford. Heather is actually Christopher in drag, but she uses the key to her brother's apartment, goes in and discovers him hiding out in the bedroom, terrified of meeting this woman. As they argue, Mary Lou listens from the living room, but Christopher is actually taking off his dress and female underwear (lots of it in those days--and grapefruits in his bra) to get dressed as Rutherford. Heather is quietly washing her hair when her extremely nerdy brother finally meets Mary Lou, and he's not nearly as shy as she expected. He's about as goofy as Julius Kelp, though.

    So will the plan work? Well, there are many funny moments. One of the best that I haven't mentioned is Warren's attempt to hit a board in Susan's karate class. But there's much more that you can probably guess will happen.

    There was one scene that didn't make a lot of sense to me. After all ... well, I won't give that away. Let's just say there's a lot of excitement at the end. Particularly funny are the elevators.

    I was surprised at first, because this didn't seem to be the wacky, zany comedy typical of Jerry Lewis. I've only seen a handful of his films only because I waited for them to show up on broadcast TV, which this one did. But it took time to set up the situation, and I worried this would actually be a comedy-drama. No, once the scheme began, it was everything one would expect from Jerry Lewis. Maybe not his best work, but he certainly shows his talent here.

    James Best even sounded a little like Sheriff Rosco at times. Those noises he made when Ben was nervous must have originated with Best and not Rosco.

    Kathleen Freeman was very good as Elizabeth's secretary. The poor woman, but she handles herself very professionally.

    The other actresses did a pretty good job too. And there's a drunk who is entertaining.

    I enjoyed the music a lot. Jerry Lewis must enjoy big band jazz as much as I do. And there's quiet jazz in restaurants as well as straight elevator music. No, not in the elevator. The elevator scenes are too wacky for that.

    A great job.
    5Isaac5855

    Another Jerry Lewis multi-character romp from the 60's

    One of my first exposures to Jerry Lewis as a child was the 1966 comedy THREE ON A COUCH in which Jerry played a nebbish engaged to marry a beautiful psychiatrist (Janet Leigh) who feels spends entirely too much time obsessing over three of her female patients (Leslie Parrish, Mary Ann Mobley, Gia Golan) who all have serious hang-ups regarding men and dating. In order to free up his fiancée so she'll have more time for him, Chris, Jerry's character, pretends to be three different guys and initiates a romance with all three women so that they'll gain some self-esteem where men are concerned and his fiancée will have more time to plan their wedding. I remember, even as a child, thinking to myself, "Does he really think he can get away with this?" but I guess Jerry thought like I did, he'd have no career. The three imaginary suitors border on cartoon characters and the lovely Leigh is wasted in thankless role, but there are scattered laughs throughout and Jerry has made worst movies, but it's better than a route canal.
    VetteRanger

    I'm not normally a Jerry Lewis fan

    I'm not normally a Jerry Lewis fan ... but this is one of his very few movies I can watch more than once. Lewis held back on his normal goofy, over-the-top performance to play a more normal type of romantic comedy lead.

    In this one, his paramour is Janet Leigh: mature, gorgeous, and worth the watch all by herself. Lewis has given up a career as a commercial artist to take on art for art's sake, and won a contest to spend a month in Paris painting a wall-sized mural ... all expenses paid plus a $10,000 commission. He wants Janet to spend the month in Paris with him. Who wouldn't?! :-)

    The problem is she's a psychiatrist with three patients she can't abandon until she'd given them more confidence after bad breakups. So Lewis set out to date the three patients, as three different impostors, and give them confidence. What could go wrong?

    Plenty!
    loserfilmnerd

    Hilarious farce full of deceit, wacky antics, and zany schemes.

    I just finished watching this movie, it was the first Jerry Lewis film I've seen, and I'm already a fan of this comic genius. Three On A Couch is full of gags from start to finish, constantly keeping the audience laughing with Jerry Lewis' character's attempts to make three women think he's three separate people. Jerry Lewis shows his talent as a comedic actor as he plays all those characters perfectly, but also awkwardly as though he's nervous that he might get found out. And yet the awkwardness is so subtle that it's believable that the ladies don't think something's up. He's also very deadpan in this movie, and at the same time high energy in his gags, much like Charlie Chaplin. So, bravo Jerry Lewis, you put on one heck of a performance.

    Although I will admit that some of the jokes didn't work. Some of them went on just a tad too long. Although they don't hurt the movie much. Also one thing I thought the movie should've done was make the three women more developed characters instead of just one-dimensional straight-men. Only one of them showed a personality (the athletic one), the others just seemed to have personalities described but not shown.

    Judging by the low score and the fact that it was featured in a book called Fifty Worst Movies (or something like that), I'm guessing this is one of Jerry Lewis' lesser movies. I haven't seen any of his other films so I can't say if Jerry Lewis fans will enjoy this, but I'd definitely recommend it to people who want to watch a really funny movie.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      For some unknown reason, advertising contained the odd statement "Introducing James Best" - a performer who'd been acting steadily in TV and films since 1950, 16 years earlier.
    • Quotes

      Mary Lou Mauve: If y'all would 'scuse me, Ah'm lookin' for the doctor.

      The Drunk: Oh, I happen to be a doctor, but I'm not in surgery today. You see, I'm driving the ambulance. Say, what's your name?

      Mary Lou Mauve: Ah do declare!

      The Drunk: Clare. Oh, that's a pretty name!

    • Connections
      Referenced in What's My Line?: Jerry Lewis (4) (1966)
    • Soundtracks
      A Now and a Later Love
      Music by Lou Brown (as Louis Yule Brown)

      Lyrics by Jerry Lewis and Lil Mattis

      Sung by Danny Costello

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    FAQ

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • March 1966 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Languages
      • English
      • French
    • Also known as
      • Tres en un sofá
    • Filming locations
      • Ponyland, Beverly Park Kiddieland, West Hollywood, California, USA(Photograph)
    • Production company
      • Jerry Lewis Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Gross US & Canada
      • $2,800,000
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 49 minutes
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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