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Dr. Dolittle (1998 film)

Dr. Dolittle (also written as Doctor Dolittle) is a 1998 American fantasy comedy film directed by Betty Thomas, written by Larry Levin and Nat Mauldin, and starring Eddie Murphy in the title role along with Ossie Davis and Oliver Platt. The film was based on the series of children's stories of the same name by Hugh Lofting, but used no material from any of the novels; the main connection is the titular character Dr. John Dolittle and his ability to talk to animals, although the Pushmi-Pullyu, a much-loved feature of the books, notably makes a very brief appearance in a couple of scenes. The first novel, The Story of Doctor Dolittle (1920) had originally and previously been filmed in 1967 as a musical of the same name, which was a closer (albeit still very loose) adaptation of the book. The film was a box-office success,[3] although it received mixed reviews from critics upon release.[4][5]

Dr. Dolittle
Theatrical release poster
Directed byBetty Thomas
Screenplay by
  • Larry Levin
  • Nat Mauldin
Based onDoctor Dolittle
by Hugh Lofting
Produced by
Starring
CinematographyRussell Boyd
Edited byPeter Teschner
Music byRichard Gibbs
Production
companies
Distributed by20th Century Fox
Release date
  • June 26, 1998 (1998-06-26)
Running time
85 minutes[2]
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$71.5 million
Box office$294.4 million[3]

The film's success generated one theatrical sequel, Dr. Dolittle 2 (2001), and three films released direct to video: Dr. Dolittle 3 (2006), Dr. Dolittle: Tail to the Chief (2008), and Dr. Dolittle: Million Dollar Mutts (2009).[6]

Plot edit

In 1968, five-year old John Dolittle displays an ability to hear what animals are saying, starting with his own dog. John asks his dog questions like: "Why do dogs sniff each other's butts?" and the dog's response is that it is their own way of shaking hands, and John does it when meeting his new principal. His behavior horrifies his father Archer, who hires a local priest to perform an exorcism on John in order to remove the "devil" from him. During the exam, the dog bites and attacks the priest, resulting in Archer sending the dog away. Following this ordeal, John eventually stops talking to animals and soon forgets he can.

Thirty years later in 1998, John is a doctor and a surgeon living in San Francisco, California. He is happily married to his wife Lisa, and has two daughters, typical teenager Charisse, and nerdy Maya, who has a pet guinea pig named Rodney, and what she believes is a swan egg, which she hopes will bond with her upon hatching. A large medical company owned by Mr. Calloway seeks to buy John's practice, a deal in which one of his colleagues, Dr. Mark Weller, is enthusiastic about, though their other colleague, Dr. Gene Reiss, is skeptical about the deal due to the potential of downsizing patients and staff.

John's family goes on vacation, while John goes back to work to see a patient, and then pick up Rodney. On his way home, he accidentally nearly hits a dog with his SUV, causing the dog to scold him in anger. Afterward, as John is driving to the cabin his family is staying at with Rodney in the car, Rodney starts talking to John, causing him to believe he is having a mental breakdown. John has a CT scan after animals start asking for favors when he helps a wounded owl, and he then unwittingly adopts the dog he ran over, eventually naming him Lucky. John later starts secretly helping various animals, including a suicidal circus tiger named Jake, who suffers great cerebral vein. Through all this, John begins learning to re-appreciate his gift, at one point confiding to both Lucky and Mark that he has never felt excited about his work in years. However, Lisa and Mark catch him performing CPR on a rat, and have him sectioned in a mental hospital.

Believing his gift is a hindrance, John rejects all abnormality in his life and returns to work, but in doing so, ostracizes Maya as well, who comes to believe he dislikes her. Maya admits to Archer that she liked the idea of her father talking to animals, and John has a change of heart when he eavesdrops on the conversation. He admits to Maya that he does not like, but loves her for who she is, and encourages her to continue being what she wants to be.

John then apologizes to Lucky, and together, they sneak Jake out of the circus and take him to the hospital to perform surgery on him, on the same night a party is going on where Calloway will buy the company. Mark and Gene catch John, Gene decides to assist John. Soon, Jake is exposed in front of everyone at the party, and they all watch as John and Gene operate on Jake in the operating theater. Archer reveals to Lisa that John's gift is real, encouraging her to venture into the theater and keep Jake calm while John and Gene discover Jake is suffering from a blood clot and successfully remove it, saving Jake's life. John then declines Calloway's offer to buy the place and officially accepts his gift of talking to animals.

John becomes both a doctor and a veterinarian afterwards, embracing his ability to talk to animals. Maya's egg hatches into a baby alligator, and the final scene shows John and Lucky walking on the street together with John talking about how he's going to treat animals and people, and Lucky talking about how he wants different treatment from now on. The owl then goes after the rats.

Cast edit

Live-action cast edit

Voice cast edit

Puppeteers edit

Lead puppeteer

Puppeteers

Music edit

Soundtrack edit

Dr. Dolittle: The Album
Soundtrack album by
various artists
ReleasedJune 16, 1998
Recorded1997–98
GenreHip hop, R&B
LabelAtlantic
ProducerTimbaland, Rodney Jerkins, The Legendary Traxster, Various
Dr. Dolittle soundtrack chronology
Dr. Dolittle: The Album
(1998)
Dr. Dolittle 2
(2001)
Singles from Dr. Dolittle
  1. "Are You That Somebody?"
    Released: June 16, 1998
  2. "Same Ol' G"
    Released: July 28, 1998
  3. "That's Why I Lie"
    Released: September 22, 1998

The soundtrack was released on June 16, 1998 through Atlantic Records and consisted of a blend of hip hop and contemporary R&B. The soundtrack was a huge success, peaking at 4 on both the Billboard 200 and the Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums and was certified 2× Multi-Platinum on October 20 the same year. Allmusic rated the soundtrack four stars out of five.[7]

The soundtrack's only charting single, "Are You That Somebody?" by Aaliyah, also found success, making it to 21 on the Billboard Hot 100 and received a nomination for Best Female R&B Vocal Performance at the Grammy Awards.[8]

Information taken from Dr. Dolittle: The Album liner notes:[9]

No.TitleWriter(s)Producer(s)Length
1."That's Why I Lie" (Ray J)Rodney Jerkins4:51
2."Let's Ride (Remix)" (Montell Jordan featuring Shaunta)
  • Teddy Bishop
  • Dutch (remix)
4:53
3."Are You That Somebody?" (Aaliyah)Timbaland4:27
4."Same Ol' G" (Ginuwine)
  • Mosley
  • Garrett
Timbaland4:21
5."Lady Marmalade (Timbaland Remix)" (All Saints)
  • Johnny Douglass
  • Neville Henry
  • Karen Gibbs
  • John Benson
  • Timbaland (remix)
4:03
6."Da Funk" (Timbaland)MosleyTimbaland4:29
7."Do Little Things" (Changing Faces featuring Ivan Matias)5:09
8."Your Dress" (Playa)
Timbaland3:59
9."Woof Woof" (69 Boyz)Van Bryant
4:11
10."Rock Steady" (Dawn Robinson)Aretha FranklinJake and the Phatman3:05
11."In Your World" (Twista and Speedknot Mobstaz)
The Legendary Traxster4:50
12."Lovin' You So" (Jody Watley)Dwayne Wiggins3:35
13."Dance" (Robin S. featuring Mary Mary)Warryn Campbell3:38
14."Push 'Em Up" (Eddie Kane & DeVille featuring DJ Toomp)
  • Eddie Grier
  • Deodrick Veal
  • Warren Borders
  • Alan Borders
  • Aldrin Davis
DJ Toomp3:46
15."Ain't Nothin' but a Party" (The Sugarhill Gang)
  • Sherwin Charles
  • James Carter
  • Travis Ray Lane
  • Ivan Norwood
  • Life Long Entertainment
  • I-Roc
  • Jammin' James Carter
  • Ivan Norwood
3:57

Sample credits[9]

  • "Lovin' You So" contains elements from "Pack'd My Bags", written by Chaka Khan and Tony Maiden.
  • "Dance" contains "If Ever I Fall" by The Winans.
  • "Ain't Nothin' but a Party" contains an interpolation of "8th Wonder", written by Sylvia Robinson, Clifton Chase, Michael Wright, Cheryl Cook, and Guy O'Brien.

Reception edit

Box office edit

On its opening weekend, Dr. Dolittle earned $29,014,324 across 2,777 theaters in the United States and Canada, ranking #1 at the box office, the best debut for a 20th Century Fox film that week. It would go on to achieve the biggest opening weekend for an Eddie Murphy film, beating The Nutty Professor.[10] That record would be surpassed by its successor Nutty Professor II: The Klumps in 2000.[11] By the end of its run, the film had grossed $144,156,605 in the United States and $150,300,000 internationally, totaling $294,456,605 worldwide.[3]

Critical reception edit

On Rotten Tomatoes the film has an approval rating of 41% based on reviews from 51 critics, with an average rating of 5.2/10. The site's critics consensus reads, "Doctor Dolittle finds some mirth in the novelty of wisecracking critters, but this family feature's treacly tone is made queasy by a reliance on scatological gags that undercut the intended warmth".[4] On Metacritic it has weighted average score of 46 out of 100 based on reviews from 20 critics, indicating "mixed or average reviews".[5] Audiences surveyed by CinemaScore gave the film a grade "A−" on scale of A to F.[12]

Leonard Klady of Variety called it "slim on story and rife with scatological jokes, the film may strike a chord with pre-teens but misses for an older crowd despite some nifty effects and broad humor".[13] Kenneth Turan of the Los Angeles Times dismissed the film as "a complete waste of time and potential".[14]

Nathan Rabin of The A.V. Club wrote: "Murphy is stuck playing second fiddle to the film's menagerie of nutty animals, he makes an engaging straight man. Dr. Dolittle isn't as sharp or consistent as Murphy's The Nutty Professor, but it's an amusing, lightweight diversion".[15] Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun-Times gave the film 3 out of 4 and wrote: "Too many adults have a tendency to confuse bad taste with evil influences; it's hard for them to see that the activities in Doctor Dolittle, while rude and vulgar, are not violent or anti-social. The movie will not harm anyone".[16]

Home media edit

Dr. Dolittle was released on LaserDisc and VHS on November 24, 1998, on DVD on August 3, 1999 and on Blu-ray disc on March 18, 2014.

Other media edit

Video game edit

A video game based on the film was released in Europe for the PlayStation 2 on November 29, 2006.[17]

References edit

  1. ^ Petrikin, Chris (February 18, 1998). "Fox renamed that toon". Variety. Retrieved March 31, 2018.
  2. ^ . British Board of Film Classification. July 1, 1998. Archived from the original on 2016-04-09.
  3. ^ a b c "Dr. Dolittle (1998)". Box Office Mojo. Internet Movie Database. Retrieved 2011-07-27.
  4. ^ a b "Dr. Dolittle (1998)". Rotten Tomatoes. Fandango. Retrieved June 4, 2023.
  5. ^ a b "Dr. Dolittle Reviews". Metacritic. CBS Interactive. Retrieved March 28, 2016.
  6. ^ Dr. Dolittle Million Dollar Mutts at IMDb  
  7. ^ Allmusic review
  8. ^ "Nine Things We'll Never Forget About Aaliyah". Billboard. 25 August 2010. Retrieved October 7, 2010.
  9. ^ a b Dr. Dolittle: The Album (booklet). Atlantic. 1998.
  10. ^ "Murphy big at the box office". The Manhattan Mercury. June 29, 1998. p. 16. from the original on November 5, 2022. Retrieved November 5, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.  
  11. ^ Linder, Brian (July 31, 2000). "Weekend Box Office: Nutty II Grosses Out Critics, Out Grosses Competition". IGN. Retrieved April 4, 2023.
  12. ^ . CinemaScore. Archived from the original on 2018-12-20.
  13. ^ Klady, Leonard (24 June 1998). "Dr. Dolittle". Variety.
  14. ^ Kenneth Turan (26 June 1998). "'Dolittle' Could've Used a Joke Doctor". Los Angeles Times.
  15. ^ Nathan Rabin (2002). "Dr. Dolittle". The A.V. Club.
  16. ^ Ebert, Roger (June 26, 1998). "Doctor Dolittle". Chicago Sun-Times.
  17. ^ "Dr. Dolittle Box Shot for PlayStation 2 - GameFAQs". www.gamefaqs.com. Retrieved 2016-07-13.

External links edit

dolittle, 1998, film, other, uses, doctor, dolittle, disambiguation, dolittle, also, written, doctor, dolittle, 1998, american, fantasy, comedy, film, directed, betty, thomas, written, larry, levin, mauldin, starring, eddie, murphy, title, role, along, with, o. For other uses see Doctor Dolittle disambiguation Dr Dolittle also written as Doctor Dolittle is a 1998 American fantasy comedy film directed by Betty Thomas written by Larry Levin and Nat Mauldin and starring Eddie Murphy in the title role along with Ossie Davis and Oliver Platt The film was based on the series of children s stories of the same name by Hugh Lofting but used no material from any of the novels the main connection is the titular character Dr John Dolittle and his ability to talk to animals although the Pushmi Pullyu a much loved feature of the books notably makes a very brief appearance in a couple of scenes The first novel The Story of Doctor Dolittle 1920 had originally and previously been filmed in 1967 as a musical of the same name which was a closer albeit still very loose adaptation of the book The film was a box office success 3 although it received mixed reviews from critics upon release 4 5 Dr DolittleTheatrical release posterDirected byBetty ThomasScreenplay byLarry Levin Nat MauldinBased onDoctor Dolittleby Hugh LoftingProduced byJohn Davis David T Friendly Joseph M SingerStarringEddie Murphy Ossie Davis Oliver PlattCinematographyRussell BoydEdited byPeter TeschnerMusic byRichard GibbsProductioncompaniesDavis Entertainment Joseph M Singer Entertainment Friendly Films Fox Family Films 1 Distributed by20th Century FoxRelease dateJune 26 1998 1998 06 26 Running time85 minutes 2 CountryUnited StatesLanguageEnglishBudget 71 5 millionBox office 294 4 million 3 The film s success generated one theatrical sequel Dr Dolittle 2 2001 and three films released direct to video Dr Dolittle 3 2006 Dr Dolittle Tail to the Chief 2008 and Dr Dolittle Million Dollar Mutts 2009 6 Contents 1 Plot 2 Cast 2 1 Live action cast 2 2 Voice cast 2 3 Puppeteers 3 Music 3 1 Soundtrack 4 Reception 4 1 Box office 4 2 Critical reception 5 Home media 6 Other media 6 1 Video game 7 References 8 External linksPlot editIn 1968 five year old John Dolittle displays an ability to hear what animals are saying starting with his own dog John asks his dog questions like Why do dogs sniff each other s butts and the dog s response is that it is their own way of shaking hands and John does it when meeting his new principal His behavior horrifies his father Archer who hires a local priest to perform an exorcism on John in order to remove the devil from him During the exam the dog bites and attacks the priest resulting in Archer sending the dog away Following this ordeal John eventually stops talking to animals and soon forgets he can Thirty years later in 1998 John is a doctor and a surgeon living in San Francisco California He is happily married to his wife Lisa and has two daughters typical teenager Charisse and nerdy Maya who has a pet guinea pig named Rodney and what she believes is a swan egg which she hopes will bond with her upon hatching A large medical company owned by Mr Calloway seeks to buy John s practice a deal in which one of his colleagues Dr Mark Weller is enthusiastic about though their other colleague Dr Gene Reiss is skeptical about the deal due to the potential of downsizing patients and staff John s family goes on vacation while John goes back to work to see a patient and then pick up Rodney On his way home he accidentally nearly hits a dog with his SUV causing the dog to scold him in anger Afterward as John is driving to the cabin his family is staying at with Rodney in the car Rodney starts talking to John causing him to believe he is having a mental breakdown John has a CT scan after animals start asking for favors when he helps a wounded owl and he then unwittingly adopts the dog he ran over eventually naming him Lucky John later starts secretly helping various animals including a suicidal circus tiger named Jake who suffers great cerebral vein Through all this John begins learning to re appreciate his gift at one point confiding to both Lucky and Mark that he has never felt excited about his work in years However Lisa and Mark catch him performing CPR on a rat and have him sectioned in a mental hospital Believing his gift is a hindrance John rejects all abnormality in his life and returns to work but in doing so ostracizes Maya as well who comes to believe he dislikes her Maya admits to Archer that she liked the idea of her father talking to animals and John has a change of heart when he eavesdrops on the conversation He admits to Maya that he does not like but loves her for who she is and encourages her to continue being what she wants to be John then apologizes to Lucky and together they sneak Jake out of the circus and take him to the hospital to perform surgery on him on the same night a party is going on where Calloway will buy the company Mark and Gene catch John Gene decides to assist John Soon Jake is exposed in front of everyone at the party and they all watch as John and Gene operate on Jake in the operating theater Archer reveals to Lisa that John s gift is real encouraging her to venture into the theater and keep Jake calm while John and Gene discover Jake is suffering from a blood clot and successfully remove it saving Jake s life John then declines Calloway s offer to buy the place and officially accepts his gift of talking to animals John becomes both a doctor and a veterinarian afterwards embracing his ability to talk to animals Maya s egg hatches into a baby alligator and the final scene shows John and Lucky walking on the street together with John talking about how he s going to treat animals and people and Lucky talking about how he wants different treatment from now on The owl then goes after the rats Cast editLive action cast edit Eddie Murphy as Dr John Dolittle Doctor Dolittle a physician who can talk to animals Dari Gerard Smith as 5 year old John Ossie Davis as Grandpa Archer Dolittle the father of John Oliver Platt as Dr Mark Weller a colleague and frenemy of John Peter Boyle as Mr Calloway a man who seeks to buy John s practice Richard Schiff as Dr Gene Reiss a colleague and loyal friend of John Kristen Wilson as Lisa Dolittle the wife of John Jeffrey Tambor as Dr Fish Kyla Pratt as Maya Dolittle the nerdy daughter of John Raven Symone as Charisse Dolittle the teenage daughter of John Steven Gilborn as Dr Sam Litvack Paul Giamatti uncredited as Blaine Hammersmith Don Calfa uncredited as Patient at Hammersmith Pruitt Taylor Vince uncredited as Patient at Hammersmith Voice cast edit Norm Macdonald as Lucky a dog that John adopts Albert Brooks as Jacob Jake a Bengal tiger Chris Rock as Rodney a guinea pig owned by the Dolittle family Reni Santoni as Rat 1 John Leguizamo as Rat 2 Julie Kavner as Female Pigeon Garry Shandling as Male Pigeon Ellen DeGeneres as Prologue Dog John s childhood pet Brian Doyle Murray as Old Retriever Phil Proctor as Drunk Monkey Jenna Elfman as Owl Gilbert Gottfried as Compulsive Dog Phyllis Katz as Goat Douglas Shamburger as Pound Dog Jeff Doucette as Possum Archie Hahn as Heavy Woman s Dog Tom Towles as German Shepherd Eddie Frierson as Skunk Paul Reubens as Raccoon Royce D Applegate as I Love You Dog James F Dean as Orangutan Chad Einbinder as Bettelheim the Cat Jonathan Lipnicki as Baby Tiger Hamilton Camp as Pig Kerrigan Mahan as Penguin Puppeteers edit Lead puppeteer Allan Trautman lead puppeteer Puppeteers Bill Barretta Kevin Carlson Bruce Lanoil Drew Massey Ian Tregonning Mak WilsonMusic editSoundtrack edit Dr Dolittle The AlbumSoundtrack album by various artistsReleasedJune 16 1998Recorded1997 98GenreHip hop R amp BLabelAtlanticProducerTimbaland Rodney Jerkins The Legendary Traxster VariousDr Dolittle soundtrack chronologyDr Dolittle The Album 1998 Dr Dolittle 2 2001 Singles from Dr Dolittle Are You That Somebody Released June 16 1998 Same Ol G Released July 28 1998 That s Why I Lie Released September 22 1998 The soundtrack was released on June 16 1998 through Atlantic Records and consisted of a blend of hip hop and contemporary R amp B The soundtrack was a huge success peaking at 4 on both the Billboard 200 and the Top R amp B Hip Hop Albums and was certified 2 Multi Platinum on October 20 the same year Allmusic rated the soundtrack four stars out of five 7 The soundtrack s only charting single Are You That Somebody by Aaliyah also found success making it to 21 on the Billboard Hot 100 and received a nomination for Best Female R amp B Vocal Performance at the Grammy Awards 8 Information taken from Dr Dolittle The Album liner notes 9 No TitleWriter s Producer s Length1 That s Why I Lie Ray J Rodney JerkinsFred Jerkins IIILaShawn DanielsIsaac PhillipsTye V TurmanTraci HaleRodney Jerkins4 512 Let s Ride Remix Montell Jordan featuring Shaunta Montell JordanTeddy BishopShaunta MontgomeryTeddy BishopDutch remix 4 533 Are You That Somebody Aaliyah Timothy MosleyStephen GarrettTimbaland4 274 Same Ol G Ginuwine MosleyGarrettTimbaland4 215 Lady Marmalade Timbaland Remix All Saints Bob CreweKenny NolanJohnny DouglassNeville HenryKaren GibbsJohn BensonTimbaland remix 4 036 Da Funk Timbaland MosleyTimbaland4 297 Do Little Things Changing Faces featuring Ivan Matias Andrea MartinIvan MatiasIvan MatiasAndrea Martin5 098 Your Dress Playa MosleyGarrettBenjamin BushTimbaland3 599 Woof Woof 69 Boyz Van BryantK MillsThrill Da Playa co 4 1110 Rock Steady Dawn Robinson Aretha FranklinJake and the Phatman3 0511 In Your World Twista and Speedknot Mobstaz TraxsterTwistaMayzeMalifThe Legendary Traxster4 5012 Lovin You So Jody Watley Tony MaidenChaka KhanDwayne WigginsRahsaan PattersonDwayne Wiggins3 3513 Dance Robin S featuring Mary Mary Warryn CampbellTrecina AtkinsErica AtkinsRay Norwood Jr Mario WinansRonald WinansHoward SmithWarryn Campbell3 3814 Push Em Up Eddie Kane amp DeVille featuring DJ Toomp Eddie GrierDeodrick VealWarren BordersAlan BordersAldrin DavisDJ Toomp3 4615 Ain t Nothin but a Party The Sugarhill Gang Sherwin CharlesJames CarterTravis Ray LaneIvan NorwoodLife Long EntertainmentI RocJammin James CarterIvan Norwood3 57 Sample credits 9 Lovin You So contains elements from Pack d My Bags written by Chaka Khan and Tony Maiden Dance contains If Ever I Fall by The Winans Ain t Nothin but a Party contains an interpolation of 8th Wonder written by Sylvia Robinson Clifton Chase Michael Wright Cheryl Cook and Guy O Brien Reception editBox office edit On its opening weekend Dr Dolittle earned 29 014 324 across 2 777 theaters in the United States and Canada ranking 1 at the box office the best debut for a 20th Century Fox film that week It would go on to achieve the biggest opening weekend for an Eddie Murphy film beating The Nutty Professor 10 That record would be surpassed by its successor Nutty Professor II The Klumps in 2000 11 By the end of its run the film had grossed 144 156 605 in the United States and 150 300 000 internationally totaling 294 456 605 worldwide 3 Critical reception edit On Rotten Tomatoes the film has an approval rating of 41 based on reviews from 51 critics with an average rating of 5 2 10 The site s critics consensus reads Doctor Dolittle finds some mirth in the novelty of wisecracking critters but this family feature s treacly tone is made queasy by a reliance on scatological gags that undercut the intended warmth 4 On Metacritic it has weighted average score of 46 out of 100 based on reviews from 20 critics indicating mixed or average reviews 5 Audiences surveyed by CinemaScore gave the film a grade A on scale of A to F 12 Leonard Klady of Variety called it slim on story and rife with scatological jokes the film may strike a chord with pre teens but misses for an older crowd despite some nifty effects and broad humor 13 Kenneth Turan of the Los Angeles Times dismissed the film as a complete waste of time and potential 14 Nathan Rabin of The A V Club wrote Murphy is stuck playing second fiddle to the film s menagerie of nutty animals he makes an engaging straight man Dr Dolittle isn t as sharp or consistent as Murphy s The Nutty Professor but it s an amusing lightweight diversion 15 Roger Ebert of the Chicago Sun Times gave the film 3 out of 4 and wrote Too many adults have a tendency to confuse bad taste with evil influences it s hard for them to see that the activities in Doctor Dolittle while rude and vulgar are not violent or anti social The movie will not harm anyone 16 Home media editDr Dolittle was released on LaserDisc and VHS on November 24 1998 on DVD on August 3 1999 and on Blu ray disc on March 18 2014 Other media editVideo game edit A video game based on the film was released in Europe for the PlayStation 2 on November 29 2006 17 References edit Petrikin Chris February 18 1998 Fox renamed that toon Variety Retrieved March 31 2018 DR DOLITTLE PG British Board of Film Classification July 1 1998 Archived from the original on 2016 04 09 a b c Dr Dolittle 1998 Box Office Mojo Internet Movie Database Retrieved 2011 07 27 a b Dr Dolittle 1998 Rotten Tomatoes Fandango Retrieved June 4 2023 a b Dr Dolittle Reviews Metacritic CBS Interactive Retrieved March 28 2016 Dr Dolittle Million Dollar Mutts at IMDb nbsp Allmusic review Nine Things We ll Never Forget About Aaliyah Billboard 25 August 2010 Retrieved October 7 2010 a b Dr Dolittle The Album booklet Atlantic 1998 Murphy big at the box office The Manhattan Mercury June 29 1998 p 16 Archived from the original on November 5 2022 Retrieved November 5 2022 via Newspapers com nbsp Linder Brian July 31 2000 Weekend Box Office Nutty II Grosses Out Critics Out Grosses Competition IGN Retrieved April 4 2023 DOCTOR DOLITTLE 1998 A CinemaScore Archived from the original on 2018 12 20 Klady Leonard 24 June 1998 Dr Dolittle Variety Kenneth Turan 26 June 1998 Dolittle Could ve Used a Joke Doctor Los Angeles Times Nathan Rabin 2002 Dr Dolittle The A V Club Ebert Roger June 26 1998 Doctor Dolittle Chicago Sun Times Dr Dolittle Box Shot for PlayStation 2 GameFAQs www gamefaqs com Retrieved 2016 07 13 External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Dr Dolittle 1998 film Dr Dolittle at IMDb nbsp Dr Dolittle at Box Office Mojo Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Dr Dolittle 1998 film amp oldid 1220043999, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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