muted

Look Who's Talking Now

Rating4.4 /10
19931 h 36 m
United States
32179 people rated

The dogs can talk at a family of 4, where mom loses her job the same day dad gets a job as pilot for a cute, single boss.

Comedy
Family
Romance

User Reviews

🖤الفتاة الغامضة🖤

29/05/2023 11:14
Look Who's Talking Now_720p(480P)

Kwasi Wired🇬🇭

29/05/2023 10:48
source: Look Who's Talking Now

Mounaye Mbeyrik

23/05/2023 03:51
I love this film i am forever watching it i think it was a really good idea to make the dogs talk like humans i just wish the kids could under stand them.My favourite character is 'james' he is really funny and makes the kids laugh.I think he is a real goof-ball and thats why molly likes him I think the characters are really good.My least favourite character is 'samantha' all she is trying to do is ruin the relationship and I really don't see why anyone would want to take her out for dinner because of the type of person she is.I also like it when Julie imagines that she can fly and then she trys to be like peter pan and climbs on the book case and her mum catches her a lands in the dogs urine.

أحمد الحطاب

23/05/2023 03:51
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!

Ali Firas

23/05/2023 03:51
Horrible second sequel to what was - before it spread into three films - a clever idea. Baby Mikey is "growed up" now - at least to the age of seven - so there's no Bruce Willis voice over, there are no funny gags about a baby's point of view. We just get dogs. DOGS? Yes, dogs. One voiced by Danny DeVito. Sound funny? Yeah, that's what I thought. Film gets ridiculous towards the end, but then again, the entire film was ludicrous from the start. Watch the first film, avoid the sequels. 0/5 stars - John Ulmer

Naiss mh

23/05/2023 03:51
Third movie in the series, kids talk on there own now, now it the dogs turn to talk. I grew up talking dogs, So I never really Grown out of these kinda of movies. I love them, I also really enjoyed this movie, This movie was very funny for both parents and kids, there are really great jokes that really work. However this movie as some Xmas moments but never really felt like Xmas movie. all the way thought. Decent Family movie, I love dogs, you will enjoy this more. 6 out of 10

Mohamme_97

23/05/2023 03:51
James (John Travolta) has a new job as a pilot for a small airline. Mollie, his wife (Kirstie Alley), has just been handed a pink slip. Their children, Mikey and Julie, are dreaming about a pet dog. Thus begins the third installment of this likeable series of films. Since Mikey and Julie are now talking on their own, the addition of not one, but two family dogs is the explanation of "who's talking now". Rocks (Danny DeVito) is a streetwise pound puppy while Daphne (Diane Keaton) is a pampered poodle that is a gift of James' new boss, Samantha. Speaking of Samantha, she has set her sights on luring James away from his happy family life. Can the family adjust to life with the canines and thwart Samantha's romantic schemes? This is a funny and fresh addition to the Look Who's Talking series. Travolta and Alley exude such charm and humor that they make a terrific comedy team. The rest of the cast is notable and the voices of DeVito and Keaton bring their doggy personalities to life in a big way. The script is somewhat predictable but still brings a smile to any lucky viewer. There are some scenes involving a wolf that may be scary for the youngest movie enthusiasts. But, on the whole, this is a fine film for the entire family to chuckle over.

Majo💛🍀

23/05/2023 03:51
Awful third film with the dogs doing the talking this time. Voices of DeVito and Keaton add no humor or life to this faded series of films.

Michelle Erkana

23/05/2023 03:51
At least the second film in this god-awful trilogy had the benefit of being so bad and inappropriate it was unintentionally hilarious. This scattershot, occasionally offensive, always unsettling and very dumb film is one of the most boring cinematic experiences in recent memory. The side plot of dogs, (how'd they score DeVito and Keaton, both of whom were doing much better that Alley or Travolta at this point in their carreers?), is useless; the 'dad is hard at work' subplot is just recycled from the second film, (they even use the same dream gag), and the plot doesn't really exist. And why does everyone keep ragging on Travolta's carreer? Being a pilot is no easy feat! Travolta and Alley, who seem to get along in real life, seem to repel each other onscreen; maybe because they're platonically inclined to each other in reality; onscreen they're like two positively charged magnets pushing each other apart. On top of all that, the casual misogyny throughout is grating and extremely distasteful. Dumb, dumb, dumb.

Joya Ben Delima

23/05/2023 03:51
Decided to watch "Look Who's Talking Now" as the podcast "How Did This Get Made" is planning to (rightly) eviscerate it in the near future. In this second sequel to the inexplicably popular "Look Who's Talking" Mikey and Julie have reached the age where they can actually speak, so the hearing thoughts conceit is pushed onto two dogs that come to live with the family. James (John Travolta) and Mollie's (Kirstie Alley) marriage is being put to the test by the long hours James is taking in his new job as a private pilot, flying around his new boss played by Lysette Anthony. Into their lives come two dogs, Rocks (voiced (badly) by Danny Devito) and Daphne (voiced by Diane Keaton). Eventually the film get bored and crowbars these two plots together before giving up and prolapsing into one of the worst music videos your ever likely to see. What's striking about "Look Who's Talking Now" upon watching it is the disinterest the people involved it making it seemed to have. I'll save Kirstie Alley and John Travolta from too much criticism here, they are doing their best with what was given to them and both have proven themselves capable in other roles. But that's about the only plus point. Logic is sacrificed pretty early on. Rocks ages from a puppy to fully grown dog during the opening scenes, although there's no other indication that any time has passed, the kids are the same age, and their home situation is the same. The daughter Julie (Tabitha Lupien) is enigmatically obsessed with Charles Barkley, in a way that never pans out to be relevant to the plot (almost as if they convinced Barkley to do a cameo and then had to find a way to get it into the plot somehow). The family are struggling financially, in that kinda of 90's Hollywood struggling where they have a massive apartment in New York, a car and the world is so full of qualified pilots that one would struggle to find work. Everything that happens to, and with, the dogs, who the film was supposed to be about, is completely pointless until the end and they both get a "Lassie" moment to help the film find some sort of conclusion. And then there's the music video. The version I saw was with Jordy's "It's Christmas, C'est Noel". Merde'. The nadir of badly shot, badly conceived, mess.
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