Dog lovers, take note: Be prepared to bawl your eyes out at “Marley & Me,” David Frankel’s sure-footed adaptation of John Grogan’s bestselling memoir about an extremely unruly Labrador and the family ...
Life isn’t ever perfect. The marriage, the kids, the jobs and the pets that come along to fill it up can get messy and difficult. But it is in the muck that we often discover the love and the laughter ...
Don't be fooled - although this may possibly be the cutest puppy you will ever see, he is one hell of a demon! I'm going to make a confession before we get further into this. I love dogs more than ...
Decades after Lassie and Rin Tin Tin, another canine is eyeing a primetime series named after her. In a competitive situation, NBC has landed Marley & Me, a single-camera comedy sequel to the hit 2008 ...
A word of warning to parents out there who have been seduced by the adorable-puppy-in-Christmas-bow advertising of “Marley & Me” and are considering taking their youngsters to see it: Don’t. The dog — ...
It’s holiday time, and while I hate to be a Scrooge, a little spoiler warning is necessary here for those who expect that “Marley & Me” will be a merry romp of puppified sweetness and light. You could ...
The Marley in Fox's sentimental dramedy "Marley & Me" is a canine that bears scant resemblance to such film heroes as Rin Tin Tin, Lassie or Old Yeller. He is, in fact, "the world's worst dog." By ...
Perri Nemiroff is the 2025 Press Award winner at the ICG Publicists Awards. She's the senior producer at Collider where she hosts and produces the interview series, Collider Ladies Night, a show ...
Whenever a movie — particularly one in which animals are involved — makes me cry, I knuckle down and ask myself some serious questions, and not just out of professional duty: Were those tears coaxed ...
Many young couples do it: Get a dog to give their parenting skills a test drive. John (Owen Wilson) and Jenny (Jennifer Aniston) Grogan, a 20something newlywed pair of newspaper reporters, get their ...
All that really counts for a movie like "Marley & Me" is that the climactic scenes empty the audiences' tear ducts, and in this it succeeds to the point that theater managers may need to mop the ...