Glasgow Times

PITCHPERFE­CT3(12A) **

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AFTER a rollicking reunion in the effervesce­nt 2015 sequel Pitch Perfect 2, delightful­ly dysfunctio­nal a cappella champions The Barden Bellas are, frustratin­gly, off-key and out of sync for their farewell tour of the musical comedy franchise.

The original film was one of the sleeper hits of 2012, part of a modern vanguard of fabulously female-centric comedies including Bridesmaid­s.

Despite some cute moments and a nostalgic montage of behind-thescenes footage over the end credits, director Trish Sie’s film is one rousing chorus of sisterly solidarity too far for these harmonious heroines.

Screenwrit­er Kay Cannon hits emotional bum notes for the first time.

A cacophony of hastily composed character arcs falls flat and the luminous Anna Kendrick is almost relegated to backing singer in the ensuing madness.

Crushingly, John Michael Higgins and Elizabeth Banks are little more than feedback as brilliantl­y waspish commentato­rs John Smith and Gail Abernathy-McKadden.

They are shoe-horned into the background under the flimsy pretence of making a fly-on-the-wall documentar­y about the Bellas’ final hurrah “as these women approach 30 and cease to be valuable as human beings”.

Higgins and Banks deserve better. So do we. The majority of the Bellas have left college.

It’s a hard knock life without the unstinting support of the sisterhood as Beca (Kendrick) discovers when she quits her job as music producer after creative difference­s with an artist.

Soon after, opportunit­y knocks for the Bellas to reform for an overseas tour with the United Service Organisati­ons (USO), which entertains the United States Armed Forces.

Beca and room-mate Fat Amy (Rebel Wilson) trade hugs with the rest of the gang including Aubrey (Anna Camp), Chloe (Brittany Snow), Cynthia-Rose (Ester Dean), Emily (Hailee Steinfeld), Flo (Chrissie Fit) and beatboxer Lilly (Hana Mae Lee).

Arriving at a naval station in Spain, the Bellas are crestfalle­n to learn they will be competing on the tour against three other bands including guitarheav­y girl rockers Evermoist led by sneering siren Calamity (Ruby Rose).

The Bellas are going to have to tune up their pitch-slapping putdowns and aca-dapt to win a support slot at a concert headlined by DJ Khaled.

Pitch Perfect 3 is engineered to a familiar beat punctuated by melodious musical mash-ups but Sie’s uneven picture ends the travelling sisterhood’s reign atop the musical comedy charts with a whimper.

Like the gobbledygo­ok-spewing Minions in the Despicable Me series, Wilson’s charmingly self-deluded Fat Amy is hilarious in small doses.

Screenwrit­er Cannon foolishly promotes the character to centre stage with a loopy action-heavy subplot that reunites Fat Amy with her long-lost father, played by John Lithgow with an Australian accent that went walkabout in the outback before shooting began.

He’s down under, along with the film, and out for the musical count.

What a crying aca-shame. Running time: 93 mins Director: Trish Sie

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