Beethoven's 3rd
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Average customer review:Product Description
BEETHOVEN JOINS THE NEWTON FAMILY FOR A RV VACATION, AND SAVES THEM FROM TWO BUMBLING CROOKS OUT TO RECOVER A DVD CONTAINING A FORTUNE IN STOLEN COMPUTER INFORMATION. SPECIAL FEATURES: CAST AND FILMMAKERS, PRODUCTION NOTES AND UNIVERSAL WEB LINK.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #50607 in DVD
- Brand: Universal Studios
- Released on: 2009-04-28
- Rating: G (General Audience)
- Aspect ratio: 1.85:1
- Formats: Anamorphic, Closed-captioned, Color, Dolby, DVD, Widescreen, NTSC
- Original language: English
- Subtitled in: French
- Number of discs: 1
- Running time: 99 minutes
Customer Reviews
This 3rd sequal is not worth it!
I watched this third sequal right after seeing the two original movies and it was not what I expected. I love Beethoven 1 & 2 but this sequal was boring and ridiculous. The original cast are gone and the new characters are just boring. The villians in this movie are really stupid. The only interesting thing about this movie was looking at Beethoven. This movie really wasted my time and I suggest saving your time and money. Not funny or interesting at all!!! Anyway I can't wait to see the fourth one though!!!
Beethoven tragedy
I have always loved the other beethoven movies but this is WORST! The 4th one was great, but ugh! this one is [bad]! the director put NOT ONE BIT of taste or brains into this one, he/she just wanted to make "another beethoven movie to get it over with". Don't buy this. save your money.
"Full House" with a bigger dog
There is only so much you can do with fifteen minutes of dog footage, and a two hour feature film is not a viable option. Granted it is difficult to make a movie for children when your main premise has been done before - and better - but the direction of this film was disastrous, apparently relying solely on a few moments of animal appeal as salvation. Still, indications are that young children do enjoy the film; young girls will identify with the daughter's plight to be heard, young boys will get a laugh out of the recurring poop and fart jokes, and some of both will cheer Beethoven when he gets to make his brief appearances. Adults, however, will only derive pleasure from the children in the audience.




