Mickey, Donald and Goofy are the French three Musketeers.
Parisian screw-up urchins Mickey, Donald, and Goofy can barely keep out of trouble for a day, but since a gallant musketeer saved Mickey and gave him his plumed hat as a token that they may one day join the glorious French royal elite regiment, they dream of enlisting. Guards captain Peg-Leg, who dreams of usurping the throne, cruelly laughs them away as butterfingers midgets of no use. Yet when haughty Minnie, whom he needs to wed to legitimate his coup, demands her own bodyguard, which might actually protect her, he decides to enlist and propose the bumbling trio, confident he and masked accomplices can easily eliminate and blame those.—KGF Vissers
With dreams of becoming one day great musketeers, the humble French peasants and best friends, Mickey, Donald, and Goofy, finally get their big break when the boorish captain of the Musketeers, Peg-Leg Pete, assigns them to guard Princess Minnie. Hoping to take advantage of this marvellous opportunity, the scheming commander concocts a devious plan to get power and glory; however, not if the trio can help it. Can the three musketeers overcome their fears to save the day?—Nick Riganas
Best buddies Mickey, Donald, and Goofy are small-time janitors with big dreams of becoming Musketeers. Peg-Leg Pete, captain of the Musketeers, points out why they'll never make it: Donald is a coward, Goofy is a dim-wit, and Mickey is short. But things change when Princess Minnie demands Musketeer bodyguards when assassins, hired by Pete so he can be king, nearly drop a safe on her. Knowing real Musketeers are too-well trained, Pete hires Mickey, Donald, and Goofy, the clumsy janitors as Musketeers and Minnie's bodyguards.—Kari Gilmore