Look Who's Talking Now!

Look Who's Talking Now!

1993 "The world's favorite family is back."
Look Who's Talking Now!
Look Who's Talking Now!

Look Who's Talking Now!

4.4 | 1h36m | PG-13 | en | Comedy

When high-powered executive Samantha LeBon hatches a scheme to spend a romantic Christmas with her new employee – the unsuspecting, blithesome James – his wife, their kids and their two dogs, Rocks and Daphne, must rescue him before he makes a terrible mistake.

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4.4 | 1h36m | PG-13 | en | Comedy , Romance , Family | More Info
Released: November. 05,1993 | Released Producted By: TriStar Pictures , Country: United States of America Budget: 0 Revenue: 0 Official Website:
Synopsis

When high-powered executive Samantha LeBon hatches a scheme to spend a romantic Christmas with her new employee – the unsuspecting, blithesome James – his wife, their kids and their two dogs, Rocks and Daphne, must rescue him before he makes a terrible mistake.

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Cast

John Travolta , Kirstie Alley , Diane Keaton

Director

Michael S. Bolton

Producted By

TriStar Pictures ,

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Reviews

SnoopyStyle The Ubriaccos are back. James (John Travolta) get a new job as a pilot for entitled Samantha (Lysette Anthony) who is the president of a major company. Meanwhile, Mollie (Kirstie Alley) gets laid off from her accounting job. Mikey and Julie get 2 new dogs. Rocks (Danny DeVito) is a mutt and the runt of the litter from the dog pound. Daphne (Diane Keaton) is a spoiled pedigree poodle from Samantha.The family is now bland. The kids are not as compelling without their gimmick. It seems like the movie is struggling to find something to happen to the family. I do mean struggle. It has way too many stupidity. I don't get why there's a dream sequence with Julie and Charles Barkley. It seems like filler. The dogs get sporadic screen time in the first half. I expected that the dogs would be in the home right away but the first half is wasted. Once the family unites with the dogs, it gets the expected kids with dogs mayhem. I keep thinking that there is a better story. The story is more like a sitcom. It should have been a fun family fare. I am bored with the dream sequences. This is like watching an unstable house of cards completely collapse. Then it takes a hard turn at the end that doesn't fit any of the rest of the movie.
XenoCorpse What can be said? In an attempt to milk the "celebrity voices something that doesn't have it's own speaking voice" schtick, the Look Who's Talking series wanders from babies (which they did twice) to dogs. I half-expected them to continue the series after this outing by focusing on the talking tapeworms in Kirstie Alley's stomach or some similar thing.Sure, it's cute and has its moments, but ultimately this movie's a big fluffy nothing with Danny DeVito doing some of the worst voice work of his career, and Diane Keaton doing the worst acting of her entire life, voice or not. How many "awwww" moments does it take to get to the sappy center of a "Look Who's Talking" movie? The world really doesn't need to know.
leighabc123 That movie was much better than that. It was so cool to hear the dogs talk. And it was also cool to see how Mikey and his sister would be like when they are older. This was actually one of the best movie sequels! And we got to see how the boy on 7th Heaven was when he was younger. This movie was so funny. It might have not been the best movie, but it deserved a much better rating than #94 on the worst movies of all times list!
tfrizzell Another near-worthless installment in the silly series has pet dogs (voiced by Danny DeVito and Diane Keaton) dominating the action. The babies are old enough now to talk on their own so a new idea had to come about. The likeable cast once again seems lost in the stupid film. A cameo by then-NBA superstar Charles Barkley and the artificial suspense generated in the film's final act are not near enough to save the movie. Not as bad as the second, but then again few films are. 2 stars out of 5.