The dialogue is witty and often irreverent, and the artwork is wonderfully weird.
Teacher's Pet (2004)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:71
Fresh:53
Rotten:18
Average Rating:6.5/10
Consensus: Despite its short running time, Teacher's Pet is a witty and irreverent family film.
Theatrical Release:Jan 16, 2004 Wide
Box Office: $6,295,378
Synopsis: Nathan Lane hams it up beautifully in this animated film version of the Disney/ABC TV series. He provides the voice for Spot, a talking dog who longs to be a boy so much that he even dresses up as... Nathan Lane hams it up beautifully in this animated film version of the Disney/ABC TV series. He provides the voice for Spot, a talking dog who longs to be a boy so much that he even dresses up as one so he can accompany his owner Leonard (Shaun Fleming) to school, where he gets the best grades in the class. Fast-paced fun abounds here, with plenty of sly humor geared to the parents in the audience. The truly strange storyline follows Spot down to Florida where he gets himself genetically transformed into a human at the hands of controversial "wacko," Dr. Crank (Kelsey Grammar). The trouble is, he becomes a man, not a boy, and the lunacy reaches peak heights when Leonard's mom falls in love with the new dog-man. This creates all sorts of bizarre emotional havoc for Leonard, as he realizes his own pooch might become his step-dad. Meanwhile Dr. Crank is in hot pursuit, determined to take "Spot" with him on a world tour. There's plenty of zippy, irreverent musical numbers, and it all goes speeding by so fast and fresh it's nearly impossible to catch all the details in one viewing. The animation bursts off the screen in bright colors. Lane is consistently inventive and hilarious. And the supporting voices are all terrific--Paul Reubens plays one of Crank's earlier experiments gone wrong (a dim-witted alligator boy), and Barry Stiller plays a tough-talking parrot. [More]
Starring: Kelsey Grammer, Nathan Lane, Debra Jo Rupp, David Ogden Stiers
Starring: Kelsey Grammer, Nathan Lane, Debra Jo Rupp, David Ogden Stiers, Jerry Stiller, Paul Reubens, Megan Mullally, Rob Paulsen, Wallace Shawn, Estelle Harris, Jay Thomas, Shaun Fleming
Director: Timothy Bjorklund
Director: Timothy Bjorklund
Screenwriter: Bill Steinkellner, Cheri Steinkellner
Producer: Stephen Swofford
Composer: Stephen James Taylor
Studio: Buena Vista Pictures
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Release:
Jun 15, 2004
Reviews for Teacher's Pet
It's the kind of cute and silly that little kids get a kick out of seeing over and over.
Instead of making you miss the lush Disney style that is now unleashed only once every couple of years, the Teacher's Pet animation makes a virtue of its dashed-off casualness.
Teacher's Pet is no Finding Nemo, nor even Lilo and Stitch, but it is an enjoyable family film.
The movie is as adolescent as it sounds, but Kahn keeps your eyes popping with truly nonstop action and some of the most outlandishly inventive effects you've ever seen.
Has a non-sentimental appeal for that ... crowd that fancies itself too cool for kiddie stuff.
This completely random creation is essentially an adult's cartoon cut for a kid's short attention span.
By deftly blending silliness and sophistication, this little movie does its part to stem the technological tide.
Disney's marvelously quick-witted and gloriously goofy hand-drawn feature gets more laughs out of 74 minutes than many recent live-action comedies got out of much more time.
Delightful, giggle-inducing movie that will amuse kids with its quirky drawing style and outlandish action, while entertaining their parents with fast-paced, clever dialogue.
Joy! An animated feature that parents don't have to silently groan through.
I can't imagine kids embracing it, nor can I see adults shelling out the cash to see it on their own. I kinda liked it.
A weird, off-the-wall bit of surrealistic nonsense that should keep the kiddies transfixed with its colorful characters and slapstick mayhem while amusing adults.
Disney's Teacher's Pet is a zippy animated feature with some clever musical numbers about a dog who wants to be a boy.
The movie is punchy, efficient and unbelievably short -- 69 minutes, tolerable even for those who find prolonged exposure to the frantic voice of Nathan Lane to be stressful.
Gary Baseman's Emmy-winning cartoon series arrives on the big screen in a delightful blast of bold drawing, brainy humor, and hard-charging songs.
What works best involves scenes in which the visuals and humor are allowed to stick their heads out of the cage of convention.
May not be a Disney classic, but it's certainly unique enough to warrant at least a rental, if not a spot in the permanent library.
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