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Zeus and Roxanne

Play trailer Poster for Zeus and Roxanne PG Released Jan 24, 1997 1h 38m Kids & Family Comedy Drama Adventure Play Trailer Watchlist
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33% Tomatometer 9 Reviews 42% Popcornmeter 5,000+ Ratings
Children engineer a romance between their single parents (Steve Guttenberg, Kathleen Quinlan), while his dog and her dolphin bond.
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Zeus and Roxanne

Critics Reviews

View All (9) Critics Reviews
Russell Smith Austin Chronicle Rated: 1.5/5 Jun 5, 2005 Full Review Peter Stack San Francisco Chronicle Rated: 1/4 Jun 18, 2002 Full Review Mal Vincent The Virginian-Pilot More likely, Zeus and Roxanne is about money-grubbing. Rated: 2/4 Mar 14, 2022 Full Review Malcolm Johnson Hartford Courant Though this picture neither hurls lightning bolts nor melts you heart, it adds up to a pleasant enough Florida vacation. Rated: 2.5/5 Apr 16, 2018 Full Review Michael Scheinfeld Common Sense Media Predictable and utterly unoriginal. Rated: 2/5 Jan 2, 2011 Full Review Emanuel Levy EmanuelLevy.Com Rated: 3/5 Jul 21, 2005 Full Review Read all reviews

Audience Reviews

View All (103) audience reviews
Audience Member it's not horrible but not perfect either you barely see any of the scenes of the dog and dolphin relationship I kinda like Steve Guttenberg as much as the next person but the romance between him and Mary Beth is so bland the plot is amazingly predictable but in all honest it's all relatively harmless fluff for the kids, even the whole family it's pretty safe, with a safe premise but crazy, unusual one, too humans and animals can get along famously Rated 4 out of 5 stars 01/25/24 Full Review Charles T George Miller directs this family film about a scrappy, mangy mongrel who falls in love with a graceful creature way out of his league, and species- but enough about Steve Guttenberg and Kathleen Quinlan. Zeus is the dog belonging to widower Terry (Steve Guttenberg) and son Jordan (Miko Hughes). Roxanne is the dolphin being studied by Mary Beth (Kathleen Quinlan), when she isn't busy running after her bratty daughters Judith (Majandra Delfino) and Nora (Jessica Howell). Dog and dolphin meet in the opening scene of the film and the two seem to share a special bond that is never fully explored by the screenwriter. Terry and Mary Beth happen to live across the street from each other, and Zeus follows Mary Beth to work to see Roxanne. We also meet our villain, Dr. Carver (Arnold Vosloo), who pens his dolphins to study them instead of letting them frolic in the open sea like Roxanne does. Mary Beth decides to apply for a grant to study inter-species communication after seeing Zeus and Roxanne's interaction. Judith, Nora, and Jordan set Terry and Mary Beth up on a date that goes so well the kids decide shacking up would be the next logical step in the relationship. Terry has second thoughts (making one wonder where his first thoughts are since both adults are shamelessly manipulated by their offspring), and bolts with boy and dog, while Roxanne acts out in her own way. We can't have a story without some conflict, so Carver steals Mary Beth's idea and tries interspecies with his own dolphins and animals in the film's only funny scene. Zeus escapes Terry and Jordan and heads back to Roxanne, while the dolphin is rumored dead and Mary Beth goes looking for her. If I needed to describe "Zeus and Roxanne" with one word, that word would be "mild." The film makers saw their target audience, the family, and dumbed down every aspect of the production. What is produced is a bland saltine of a movie more at home on a basic cable family channel, sandwiched in between reruns of drab thirty-year old sitcoms. Terry and Jordan, two of the film's lead characters, really don't have to be here at all. Zeus could have been a stray dog discovered by Mary Beth, and the main plot of the film (dog and dolphin) could have remained intact. Instead, Terry is an immature musician cared for by Jordan, whose photographs of Zeus reminded me of early Robert Mapplethorpe. So we must suffer through the pulp romance mechanics of Mary Beth and Terry's courtship, while dog and dolphin take a back seat to the humans. Kathleen Quinlan is actually quite good here. While her character is not as straight laced and prudish as I imagine she was conceived to be, she is the best thing going. Guttenberg is given nothing, forcing that silly grin and probably wondering what the hell happened between "Cocoon" and this. The Bahamas location and underwater photography are both beautiful, as it would be hard to muck that up. Unfortunately, director Miller is as mechanical with his direction as Tom Benedek is with his screenplay. Endless shots of the animals doing adorable things gets old after a while. Bruce Rowland's high-pitched musical score is so bad, I kept muting my television, ready to blame the neighbors for playing their stereo too loud. The funniest aspect of this film is the breathless blurb on the back of the VHS box from critic Jeffrey Lyons, who salivates: "A charmer! Zeus and Roxanne will melt your hearts- and parents will enjoy it, guaranteed!" You know, if I had not checked this out from the library for free, I would be tempted to write Lyons and demand my video rental fee be refunded toot-sweet. Throw back "Zeus and Roxanne." Rated 2 out of 5 stars 07/18/23 Full Review steve d Forgettable family film that will at least entertain the kids, while not being painful for the adults. Rated 3 out of 5 stars 03/30/23 Full Review Audience Member Amazing movie!! Was always one of my childhood favourites. Rated 5 out of 5 stars 02/07/23 Full Review Audience Member Ah, one of those interesting moments where I heard of this movie and saw it before I had even heard of Nostalgia Critic. Also, how convenient the director just happens to be named George Miller so that the trailer can try to trick people into thinking this is from the director of the Mad Max trilogy. It's actually a different George Miller from Scotland who directed Neverending Story II. The dog is adorable and I thought the boy was cutesy in his performance but the adults are bland, the dog and dolphin don't share a lot of screen time, and the premise has some rather...strange...implications. And nobody says anything in the script unironically. I'm sure children will like it but at an older age, the movie plays it safer than an anime dubbed by 4Kids. Rated 1 out of 5 stars 01/23/23 Full Review Audience Member A dog and a dolphin. Yeah, because those two go hand-and-hand right? Eh, not really. Overall: F (0/10) Rated 0.5 out of 5 stars 11/28/17 Full Review Read all reviews
Zeus and Roxanne

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Cast & Crew

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Movie Info

Synopsis Children engineer a romance between their single parents (Steve Guttenberg, Kathleen Quinlan), while his dog and her dolphin bond.
Director
George Miller
Producer
Frank Price, Ludi Boeken, Gene Rosow
Screenwriter
Tom Benedek
Distributor
Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
Production Co
Metro Goldwyn Mayer, Rysher Entertainment
Rating
PG
Genre
Kids & Family, Comedy, Drama, Adventure
Original Language
English
Release Date (Theaters)
Jan 24, 1997, Original
Release Date (Streaming)
Aug 10, 2016
Box Office (Gross USA)
$7.2M
Runtime
1h 38m
Sound Mix
DTS, Surround, Dolby Digital
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