A St. Bernard puppy 'adopts' a new home after escaping from dog thieves. The Newton family just haven't realised the trouble that 185 pounds of dog can get into.... Read more
| Starring | Bonnie Hunt, Dean Jones, Oliver Platt, Stanley Tucci |
|---|---|
| Director | Brian Levant |
| Genres | Comedy, Family |
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A St. Bernard puppy 'adopts' a new home after escaping from dog thieves. The Newton family just haven't realised the trouble that 185 pounds of dog can get into....
| Starring | Bonnie Hunt, Dean Jones, Oliver Platt, Stanley Tucci, Charles Grodin, Christopher Castle, Sarah Rose Karr, Nicholle Tom |
|---|---|
| Director | Brian Levant |
| Studio | UCA |
| Run time | DVD: 1 hr 23 mins |
| Certificate | |
| Genres | Comedy, Family |
| Language | DVD: English |
| Dubbed | French, German, Italian, Spanish |
| Subtitles | DVD: Czech, Danish, Dutch, English, Finnish, French, German, Norwegian, Polish, Portuguese, Swedish |
| Released | DVD: 13 Jun 2008 Production year: 1992 |
| Format | DVD |
Fans of shows such as Rolf Harris's Animal Hospital will be in seventh heaven watching this cute family comedy about an adorable St Bernard dog named Beethoven and the effect he has on an American family. Charles Grodin, best known for his performance opposite Robert De Niro in Midnight Run, is the father who ends up with a puppy he doesn't want, which turns into a huge eating and slobbering machine. The Flintstones director Brian Levant keeps the comedy coming fast and furious, and Beethoven is gorgeous enough to soften even the hardest dog-hater's heart. Watch out for The X-Files's David Duchovny as the sleazy yuppie who reckons he's a coffee connoisseur.
Sounds horrible: a comedy about a big shaggy dog which wins the love of a suburban family by destroying their home.... read more on Time Out
loved this its a great family film looking forward to the next one a brill 10/10
we have all seen this film but still enjoyed veiwing agai.
well worth a look
With few exceptions, films about the great composers have been a rum bunch. Grieg got the egregious Song of Norway. Ken Russell did well by Delius in Song of Summer, okay by Tchaikovsky in The Music Lovers, so-so for Mahler, then perpetrated Lisztomania, with Roger Daltrey as Franz Liszt, Paul Nicholas as Wagner, and Ringo Starr as the Pope. And of course, Tom Hulce played Mozart as a braying adolescent in Amadeus. Stern, deaf old Beethoven has mostly been given a wide berth by filmmakers,... Read more