Nativity 3: Dude, Where's My Donkey?!

Nativity 3: Dude, Where's My Donkey?!(2014)

11/14/2014 (US)Comedy, Family1h 49m
4.5

Overview

This Christmas the pupils of St Bernadette's and their much-loved, madcap teacher Mr. Poppy are back for their biggest adventure yet involving fantastic flashmobs, excitable elves, Christmas carols and of course Archie the donkey! When their new teacher Mr. Shepherd loses his memory and forgets all about Christmas, as well as his fiancée Sophie and the whereabouts of the beloved Archie, it's up to the pupils of St Bernadette's to save the day. Led by the ever enthusiastic Mr Poppy, they embark on a Christmas journey like never before - but time is against them if they are to help Mr Shepherd get to New York in time for his magical yuletide wedding!

Debbie Isitt

Director

Debbie Isitt

Writer

Where to Watch

No streaming providers found for this country.

Popularity Trend

Last 30 Days
This chart shows the popularity trend over the past 30 days.

Part of the Nativity Collection

Martin Freeman is lovelorn teacher Mr Maddens, a former am-dram star whose girlfriend (Ashley Jensen) dumped him over Christmas five years ago and upped sticks, inexplicably, to La-La Land. Yuletide cheer is not his forte, but he's forced to drum some up when Pam Ferris's headmistress earmarks him to direct the Nativity play. The sequel to the popular British comedy sees a new teacher (David Tennant) take over. When he enters his school in the National 'Song for Christmas' Competition, he and his pregnant wife, and the schoolchildren, embark on an epic road trip that ends up with a birth and a donkey, where he must embrace his fears and become a hero.

Media

NATIVITY 3: DUDE, WHERE’S MY DONKEY? OFFICIAL TRAILER [HD]

NATIVITY 3: DUDE, WHERE’S MY DONKEY? OFFICIAL TRAILER [HD]

Trailer

Social

R
A review by r96sk
3.0

Written on December 12, 2020

As if the title doesn't already give it away, but this is a terrible film.

What a mess. 'Nativity 3: Dude, Where’s My Donkey?!' is like two different films in one, with the first half being overly comedic and the second portion being overly dramatic - it doesn't mesh well at all.

The drama towards the end could work on its own, but in this setting it simply doesn't fit - it actually comes across that they think they're creating a masterpiece as it all unfolds. Very odd choice to go that way.

Marc Wootton is fairly toned-down in this second sequel, which leaves it feeling flat throughout. Martin Clunes is a new addition, they pretty much make his character a mute so Clunes doesn't even get to show off his acting prowess. The roles, meanwhile, for Catherine Tate and Adam Garcia are kinda pointless.

The musical numbers are very lame, especially lyrically. I'm not suggesting they are great in any of the films, but these ones particularly stood out as being poor. The end performance is painful.

What a fall from the first film, and even the second. Yet, there is still a fourth installment to watch...