An unfunny farce with nary a clever line and not a single surprising sight gag.
See Spot Run (2001)
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Reviews Counted:76
Fresh:18
Rotten:58
Average Rating:3.7/10
Consensus: See Spot Run has all the elements chidren enjoy in a movie: a lovable dog, bad things happening to stupid adults, and lots of dog poop. For adults, it's either hit-or-miss.
Rated: PG [See Full Rating] for crude humor, language and comic violence
Runtime: 1 hr 37 mins
Genre: Comedies
Theatrical Release:Mar 2, 2001 Wide
Box Office: $32,486,094
Synopsis:
Gordon Smith, (Arquette) is an offbeat mailman who has never met a dog he couldn't handle. When he offers to baby-sit James (Jones), the young son of his beautiful neighbor Stephanie (Bibb), he's...
Gordon Smith, (Arquette) is an offbeat mailman who has never met a dog he couldn't handle. When he offers to baby-sit James (Jones), the young son of his beautiful neighbor Stephanie (Bibb), he's hoping she'll return his romantic interest. A hard working single mom, Stephanie thinks Gordon is just an overgrown kid himself but circumstances force her to leave James with him, temporarily, while she is away on business.
Meanwhile in another part of town, an FBI agent named Murdoch, (Clarke Duncan) is trying desperately to find his runaway canine partner, Agent Eleven (Bob) who has escaped from protective custody. Thanks to the super dog’s drug detecting abilities, he has incurred the wrath of local mobster kingpin Sonny Talia (Sorvino) who has put out a contract on the four footed fed.
Luckily, Agent Eleven is a lot faster and smarter than Talia’s two inept henchmen Gino (Viterelli) and Arliss (Schirripa), so they aren’t having much luck. They lose the trail completely when the dog seeks refuge in Gordon’s mail truck, where he is promptly adopted by James, who names him "Spot."
Gordon is not exactly a dog lover, especially after having to use his ingenuity to fight off the mailman-hating mutts on his harrowing Bleeker St. postal route. Armed with a variety of ingenuous devices, Gordon enters the combat zone and emerges victorious, if not exactly unscathed. Back at the post office, his colleague and good buddy Benny (Anderson) is always ready to commiserate and offer advice to Gordon about his job and his love life. Meanwhile Stephanie is having her own set of unbelievable adventures trying to get back home, thanks to a freak snowstorm.
Spot appears to be nothing but trouble so Gordon tries to persuade Angus to give him up. Instead he finds both the kid and the pooch beginning to grow on him. When the mobsters catch up to them at the local pet store, all heck breaks lose. As the fur, fish and feathers start to fly, Spot finally gets to show his true colors.
By the time Stephanie returns home to find her son and Gordon remarkably transformed, Agent Murdoch has shown up to reclaim his dog. The final decision is up to Spot but the lives he has touched will never be the same.
Starring: David Arquette, Michael Clarke Duncan, Leslie Bibb, Paul Sorvino
Starring: David Arquette, Michael Clarke Duncan, Leslie Bibb, Paul Sorvino, Anthony Anderson, Joe Viterelli, Steve Schirripa, Angus T. Jones
Director: John Whitesell
Director: John Whitesell
Screenwriter: Stuart Gibbs, Craig Titley
Composer: Dr. Hook & The Medicine Show
Studio: Warner Bros.
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Reviews for See Spot Run
Eight-year-olds will undoubtedly be on the floor when this scene is over, but every slapstick sequence feels like an uninspired retread of less potty-minded kiddie fare from the Disney live-action movie-mill of the '60s and '70s.
There's nothing about it quite so hilarious as the writing credits, which list no fewer than five writers and which, it is rumored, disguise the participation of up to five more.
Derivative, even desperately goofy in its quest to leave no gag potential unrealized. But you'll also be laughing so much, you probably won't care.
To explain the extreme, lingering stench of See Spot Run, it might be helpful to think of the movie itself as a dog.
What's amazing about See Spot Run is that, granting how wretched it looks from the trailers and TV ads, it's actually so very much worse even than that.
The crawling narrative starts out as a version of Adam Sandler's Big Daddy with training wheels.
Kids probably will enjoy the movie because bad things happen to silly grownups over and over again.
This is a comedy for kids, not some great drama for fay artístes, and as such is a complete success.
George Gallo, who wrote and directed the recent action comedy Doubletake, is one of the writers of See Spot Run, and his signature is all over this silly affair.
An entertaining kid flick with lots of broad comedy and body-function humor.
If you're a parent looking for a movie you can take your kids to and genuinely enjoy yourself, this one is a winner.
See Spot Stink would be a more appropriate title for this mangey mongrel of a movie.
The flick: See Spot Run / it's a truly bad movie / drove me to Haiku.
This is not so much of a 'bad' movie, as it is just a movie that we've seen a thousand times before.
Repeatedly falling in the same pile of dog poop got the most laughs at our screening.
Latest News for See Spot Run
June 17, 2005:
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