Look Who's Talking Now!
Look Who's Talking Now!

Look Who's Talking Now! (1993)

5.3 ? Nov 05, 1993 1h 36m

Overview

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.

Genres

Romance Comedy Family

Release Date

November 05, 1993

Rating

5.3 /10

Runtime

1h 36m

Official Trailer from YouTube

John Travolta

John Travolta

James Ubriacco

Kirstie Alley

Kirstie Alley

Mollie Ubriacco

Olympia Dukakis

Olympia Dukakis

Rosie

Lysette Anthony

Lysette Anthony

Samantha

David Gallagher

David Gallagher

Mikey Ubriacco

Tabitha Lupien

Tabitha Lupien

Julie Ubriacco

Danny DeVito

Danny DeVito

Rocks (voice)

Diane Keaton

Diane Keaton

Daphne (voice)

George Segal

George Segal

Albert

Charles Barkley

Charles Barkley

Himself

John Stocker

John Stocker

Sol

Elizabeth Leslie

Elizabeth Leslie

Ruthie

Caroline Elliott

Kid at Schoolyard

Vanessa Morley

Vanessa Morley

Kid at Schoolyard

Sandra P. Grant

Accountant

Sheila Paterson

Sheila Paterson

Old Waitress

Amos Hertzman

Pimply Faced Kid

Mark Acheson

Mark Acheson

Burly Dad

Kyle Fairlie

Kid on Santa's Lap

Victoria Brooks

Bratty Girl

Filipe Manuel Neto avatar

Filipe Manuel Neto

2.0/10

Jun 23, 2022

**It's not a good movie.** There are no two without three, and after two films, a third was made to finish a trilogy that had already begun to derail in the second film. This film, in fact, was a desperate effort to recover from the bad step, but it ended up definitively burying any vain idea of a future fourth film. The film is weak, and if we compare it to its predecessors, it becomes even more tiring. The biggest problem is an erratic and poorly written script, but the weak and naked jokes also detract from the film, which never really captures our interest. In this film, Mollie and James are taking care of two grown-up babies, but they face financial and marital difficulties from the moment she is fired and starts to stay at home, forcing James to accept the job offer of Samantha, a young and rich seductress who will try to break their marriage, leading to several jealousy fights and a climate of instability in the home. At the same time, they decide to adopt a street dog, who is the main protagonist of this film, and who will start talking to Samantha's poodle, in a funny rivalry relationship. As in any romantic comedy, it is predictable that everything will end well, between several twists and turns. The cast continues to include John Travolta and Kirstie Alley, but both are shadows of what they were in the first film. There is virtually not a minute where they come close to the performance previously achieved. Both seem aware that this movie is a mistake and shouldn't have been made, or at least it shouldn't have been made the way it was made. The dogs' voice is provided by veterans Danny DeVito and Diane Keaton, and they try to do everything they can to defend their work, but the material they've been given is bad. Lysette Anthony just doesn't do more than be annoying. Technically, it's as bland and uninteresting as the others: the cinematography doesn't bring anything new or particularly remarkable, and the sets and costumes are pretty much what we'd expect to find. The soundtrack is good enough, but it doesn't justify watching the movie at all.

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