Austin Powers in Goldmember

    Austin Powers in Goldmember
    2002

    Synopsis

    The world's most shagadelic spy continues his fight against Dr. Evil. This time, the diabolical doctor and his clone, Mini-Me, team up with a new foe—'70s kingpin Goldmember. While pursuing the team of villains to stop them from world domination, Austin gets help from his dad and an old girlfriend.

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    Cast

    • Mike MyersAustin Powers / Dr. Evil / Goldmember / Fat Bastard
    • BeyoncéFoxxy Cleopatra
    • Seth GreenScott Evil
    • Michael YorkBasil Exposition
    • Mindy SterlingFrau Farbissina
    • Verne TroyerMini Me
    • Michael CaineNigel Powers
    • Fred SavageNumber Three
    • Gwyneth PaltrowDixie Normous
    • Diane MizotaFook Mi

    Recommendations

    • 80

      The New York Times

      Like a giant balloon painted with Day-Glo colors, however, the whole gaudy mess wouldn't inflate without the force of Mr. Myers's comic genius. It's his baby, baby. And after three editions, it's still flying high.
    • 75

      Boston Globe

      The most consistently funny of the ''Austin Powers'' films.
    • 70

      Wall Street Journal

      Nothing to write home about, though nothing to stay home about either, especially if you're a dyed-in-the-polyester Powers fan.
    • 70

      New Times (L.A.)

      The movie will leave you smiling forgetfully on the way out, and Myers will have done his job.
    • 67

      Austin Chronicle

      The latest installment in the Austin Powers series has stopped making much sense at all, but it sure gets its giggle on, and good.
    • 60

      Chicago Reader

      With the jokes coming about one per second, you're bound to find something to laugh at. I found myself laughing a lot--even as I began to feel the whole thing wearing thin.
    • 50

      Rolling Stone

      The gifted Myers lets his once and (I hope) future shag king get lost in an elephantine Hollywood franchise. The first time was the charm, baby.
    • 50

      L.A. Weekly

      The laugh always comes first, and Myers' puppy-dog tenacity to that cast-iron tenet of low comedy, disarming and even somewhat charming in the first film, now has an air of careerist desperation about it.

    Loved by

    • jbazin