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The movie tells the story of Dave Douglas, a deputy district attorney in Los Angeles County who tries to live a normal life after being inadvertently infected by a top-secret genetic-mutation serum that transforms the two-legged lawyer into a four-legged sheepdog.
10 September 1931, Toledo, Ohio, USA
17 June 1975, Houston, Texas, USA
14 August 1990, Los Angeles County, California, USA
15 November 1988, Brooklyn, New York, USA
18 May 1992, New York City, New York, USA
2 October 1945, Houston, Texas, USA
26 October 1966, USA
2 September 1969, Chicago, Illinois, USA
3 April 1972, Wallingford, Connecticut, USA
24 August 1962, Kansas City, Missouri, USA
13 June 1953, Denver, Colorado, USA
3 August 1980, Shreveport, Louisiana, USA
15 January 1983, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
23 May 1978, Boston, Massachusetts, USA
February 06, 2007
A surprisingly touching family comedy with real emotion.March 10, 2006
The unruly pack of subplots make The Shaggy Dog much more convoluted than it needs to be.March 10, 2006
The Shaggy Dog may not make you howl, but it does offer a few bona fide belly laughs, which is more than the last few Tim Allen movies could boast.March 16, 2006
We've seen it a million times.March 10, 2006
This is a classic family fun fare, likely destined for sequelhood.August 19, 2006
...better than one might've expected, primarily due to the enthusiasm with which Allen tackles his role...July 28, 2006
At least Fred MacMurray had the good sense to let the co-star playing his son turn into a dog. But this is a Tim Allen picture, so he does the honors himself.September 01, 2006
A good-natured, sometimes silly family fun that will play especially well with the under-13 set.October 03, 2006
full review in GreekJune 12, 2006
The film just translates the basic idea for a new generation under the ill-conceived notion that it was necessary.March 10, 2006
Disney's tried-and-true slapstick material (est. 1959) is here given a heinously unimaginative interpretation by five screenwriters and a director who manages to squander the gifts of an absurdly overqualified supporting cast.March 10, 2006
Director Brian Robbins keeps the special effects and animatronics to a minimum, relying more often than not on real (albeit trained) dogs. That extra bit of authenticity is refreshing.