Product Details
Look Who's Talking Now

Look Who's Talking Now
Directed by Tom Ropelewski

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Average customer review:

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #8150 in DVD
  • Released on: 2002-06-11
  • Rating: PG-13 (Parental Guidance Suggested)
  • Aspect ratio: 1.33:1
  • Formats: Closed-captioned, Color, DTS Surround Sound, DVD-Video, Subtitled, NTSC
  • Original language: English
  • Subtitled in: Chinese, English, French, Korean, Portuguese, Spanish
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Running time: 95 minutes

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com
The last film in the minifranchise goes to the dogs, literally, to keep the series' major gimmick intact--letting the audience hear the thoughts of the little newcomers in the Ubriacco family. The kids who were once babies in the two prior films can now babble for themselves, so the script finds the adult characters taking in two mutts who do a "Lady and the Tramp" thing while we listen in. Travolta (rescued a year later in 1994's Pulp Fiction) and Alley mark time while Danny De Vito and Diane Keaton provide the most entertainment performing the dogs' voices. Not awful, but not necessary either, and a long way from the small but real qualities of the first film. --Tom Keogh


Customer Reviews

A great series of movies3
This is a great series of movies, but I liked the 1st one the best. Who does not like John Travolta. It is a funny movie but I recommend watching all three of them to get the best laughs.

Excelent movie!5
This movie is very funny.Rated PG-13 for off-color diolauge and some sexual humor.

Good, but if you're a wolf lover, it's not great at all. Disapointing for wolf fanatics.3
Being the wolf and dog lover that I am, I watched this movie on TV. It was pretty good and funny until near the end. They portray wolves as evil human killers in this movie. That angered me a lot. Wolves don't eat people in real life. There hasn't even been one recorded attack of a healthy wolf on a human either. Even if you were stranded out in the forest of Alaska, you'd have a better chance of getting attacked by a dog or bear or getting stung by a bug! Wolves are actually shy around humans and do their best to avoid them as much as they can. But, there have been no recorded attacks of a wolf or wolves attacking a human or humans in North America. Same probably goes for South America too.
Wolves are social animals, which means they live together like a human family would. They protect and care for eachother as well. The male wolves will usually baby sit the pups while the alpha male and female(the parents of the pups) want some time alone. Mother wolves also care for their wolves and treat them with love and caring that any human mother would. And, unlike most other animals, mother wolves don't abandon their pups when they are old enough to take care of their own. She still stays in the pack with them and so do the other wolves. Sure, she doesn't watch over them all the time anymore since they don't need babysitting any longer, but she does not leave her pack and family for good like most other animal mothers. Isn't that what us humans do when children grow up, become an adult, and don't need to be watched anymore?
The wolves usually howl for fun. They don't really howl at the moon though. That's a myth. Wolves howl for the following reasons: Fun, to call the pack together, or to tell other packs where they are. Although wolves eat meat, they don't eat or attack people. What wolves really eat are the following animals: Moose, deer, elk, caribou, rabbits, and some other small wild animals. Us humans eat those kind of animals too, do we not?
Hmm...let's stop and think for a minute. It looks to me like wolves are nothing but a reflected image of ourselves.
Anyway, if you loves wolves like me, you won't like the last scene in the movie so, I wouldn't recommend this film to you.