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Movie Reviews of Zeus and RoxanneMovie Review: The best movie ever! Summary: 5 Stars
This movie is the best movie ever!! Since dolphins are my favorite animals, the movie is already high up. It has the perfect blend of romance, animals, story, and suspence. I loved it!
Movie Review: great family movie Summary: 5 Stars
The kids and I watch this movie over and over again. It is a real feel good movie with a little bit of everything for everybody; romance, suspence, mystery, and of course, animals!
Movie Review: Wonderful, Awe-Inspiring, Transforming Beautiful Tale! Summary: 5 Stars
I love this story, and never tire of seeing this fantastic relationship between a dog and a dolphin. Beautifully rendered!
Movie Review: Great movie Summary: 5 Stars
This is a fun movie, to learn more about dolphins, also check out: Captain Jon Explores the Ocean on DVD!
Movie Review: Interspecies communication Summary: 4 Stars
Terry Barnett (Steve Guttenberg) is a widower with a young son, 10-year-old Jordan (Miko Hughes), a rock opera trying to get written, and a scruffy sandy-colored dog illogically named Zeus. Mary Beth Dunhill (Kathleen Quinlan) is a marine biologist working for a small oceanographic institute on the Florida Gulf Coast, struggling to get grant funding, working to return a formerly captive dolphin named Roxanne to the wild, and trying to raise two daughters, 15-year-old Judith (Majandra Delfino) and 12-year-old Nora (Jessica Howell). When the Barnetts rent a cottage just across from the one the Dunhills are occupying and Zeus becomes fascinated with Roxanne on seeing her leaping and playing in the bay, it changes everyone's lives. Terry is immediately attracted to Mary Beth, but the crazy circumstances of their meeting seem to mitigate against anything serious. Then Zeus stows away abord Mary Beth's research boat and, to her astonishment, seems to initiate real interchange with Roxanne. With some manipulation by the kids, Terry and Mary Beth begin to date--but Terry isn't sure he's over his wife's death. It takes Zeus, once again, to bring things to their rightful conclusion. Humor, animals, beautiful scenery, and a nasty-nice villain (Arnold Vosloo as Mary Beth's former supervisor Claude Carver)--what more do you need? Kids will like them all, and adults will enjoy following the budding (but never overemphasized) romance. In a way, it isn't just a dog and a dolphin who are learning to communicate: it's animals and humans, a man and a woman, a boy and two girls. And, after all, communication is something everybody has to master.
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