When an accident obliterates the British royal family and most of its branches, a desperate geneological search discovers the next king: Ralph, a sleazy American lounge singer. Can Ralph measure up to the job, even with the help of loyal aristocrat Willingham?
During FBI operation Agent Eleven (Bob), a drug-sniffing dog, happens to bite off a major mobster's manhood. The gangster cuts up quite savage and orders two hit men to murder the dog. To secure the canine agent, the FBI places him in the witness protection program. The dog changes both his owners and his name. Now he is adopted by a postal worker, Gordon Smith (David Arquette), who is not exactly a dog lover. One fine day when Gordon's beautiful neighbor, Stephanie (Leslie Bibb), asks him to baby-sit her son, it is a challenge for Gordon to handle the pet. The super dog makes friends with James (Angus T. Jones), trees the mailman, evades the mobsters' pursuit and gets sympathy of all kids in the neighborhood. "Spot" is full of energy while waiting for his enemies to track down him again. It remains to be seen who will lead a dog's life!
FBI agent Malcolm Turner is known best for being a brilliant, master of disguise. Malcolm's latest assignment sends him to small-town Georgia, where he's assigned to trap a brutal bank robber (and a recent prison escapee) who they suspect will be coming down to visit his ex-girlfriend Sherry and her son. Malcolm sets up a stakeout across from the home of a larger-than-life southern matriarch known as Big Momma, who's about to be visited by Sherry. It's a simple plan, but there's one big problem: Unbeknownst to Sherry, Big Momma has unexpectedly left town. So Malcolm, decides to impersonate the cantankerous Southern granny. Using a few tricks of disguise, he completely transforms himself into Big Momma, even taking on the corpulent septuagenarian's everyday routine-from cooking soul food to delivering babies to "testifying" at the local church. In the mean time, Malcolm starts falling for Sherry, who may or may not be hiding some stolen cash. Now, Malcolm/Big Momma must somehow find a way to nab his criminal and the girl.
Calvin Cambridge is fourteen, he is an orphan and dreaming of a grand basketball. Many obstacles divide him from his dream, including his low height. Still dreaming, he runs into a pair of old shoes with MJ letters on them and the boy supposes the footwear belong to none other than Michael Jordan. After the dangerous occasion with the lightning strike the boy realizes that the shoes are a magic key to the world of baseball as he gets an ability to make huge jumps, to play his favorite game at the stadiums filled with amazed, exalted spectators.
Baby Bink couldn't ask for more; he has adoring (if somewhat sickly-sweet) parents, he lives in a huge mansion, and he's just about to appear in the social pages of the paper. Unfortunately, not everyone in the world is as nice as Baby Bink's parents; especially the three enterprising kidnapers who pretend to be photographers from the newspaper. Successfully kidnaping Baby Bink, they have a harder time keeping hold of the rascal, who not only keeps one step ahead of them, but seems to be more than a little bit smarter than the three bumbling criminals.
While the spy kids grow older, their enemies get stronger and more insidious. This time Juni (Daryl Sabara) and Carmen Cortez (AlexaVega) are assigned to defeat a 3-D video game designed by the evil Toymaker (Sylvester Stallone) to outsmart the kids of the world. Once entrapped inside the virtual reality world, one can’t escape from it. With the help of his grandad, a wheelchaired invalid, Juni sets on a journey to rescue his sister disappeared somewhere in the three-dimensional world.
Jed Clampett and kin move from Arkansas to Beverly Hills when he becomes a billionaire, after an oil strike. The country folk are very naive with regard to life in the big city, so when Jed starts a search for a new wife there are inevitably plenty of takers and con artists ready to make a fast buck.
Nick, a playboy bachelor, gets into intrigue with an attractive divorcee, Suzanne. She has two kids - seven-year-old Kevin and eleven-year-old Lindsey. When Suzanne's work keeps her in Vancouver for the holiday, Nick offers to bring her kids from Portland, Oregon to reunite with their mom. But Kevin and Lindsey never liked mom's admirers... Ice Cube appears as both star and producer for this movie.
This comedy follows the misadventures of two childhood friends, Charlie Carbone (Jerry O' Connell), a New York hair stylist, and Louis Booker (Anthony Anderson), a musician and a magnet for bad luck. Once they get involved in shady dealings of mafia boss Sal (Christopher Walken) and have to travel to the Australian Outback to deliver a large sum of money to Sal's associates, Mr. Smith (Marton Csokas). The assignment is not as easy as it seems to be. First the guys enjoy their trip, but soon their good mood is replaced by fear when they accidentally injure a kangaroo. Trying to revive the poor animal, they decide to put Louis’s lucky red jacket on the kangaroo and to take a picture of it. Luckily, the kangaroo comes to its senses. On the other hand, unfortunately for the travellers, the unreasonable beast, with the money-containing-jacket on, skips away and is lost to sight in the jungles. Louis and Charlie, panic-stricken, team up with a smart American wildlife expert, Jessie by name (Estella Warren), to chase down the kangaroo in order to retrieve the mob cash.
One day an ordinary beagle (voiced by Jason Lee) finds himself abducted and taken to a secret laboratory run by a mad genetic scientist, Dr. Simon Barsinister (Peter Dinklage), conducting cruel experiments on living animals. Due to an accident in the lab, the canine becomes endowed with unimaginable powers and is then adopted by Dan Unger (Jim Belushi) for his 12-year-old son, Jack (Alex Neuberger). In his normal life Shoeshine is the same good-natured dog who dotes upon his owner. But when a crime is committed in the neighborhood, he immediately turns into Underdog, a superhero canine wearing a tight-fitting red leotard and a blue cape and fighting against transgressors.
Commandant Eric Lassard decides that the police force is overworked and understaffed, so he comes up with the idea of recruiting civilian volunteers to work side-by-side with officers in a program called "Citizens On Patrol" (COP). Carey Mahoney and his friends Moses Hightower, Larvell Jones, Eugene Tackleberry, Laverne Hooks, and Debbie Callahan are in charge of training the civilians. The civilians include Tommy "House" Conklin, Lois Feldman, Kyle, and Arnie. Captain Thaddeus Harris wants to take over Lassard's job, and that's why Harris is determined to see the COP program fail. But it's Harris and his right hand man Proctor who mess up by unintentionally allowing every inmate at the precinct 19 jail to escape.
Max spends school holidays on his own. He thinks out his own fantasy world in an attempt to escape the everyday worries of dealing with parents and school bullies. His imaginary friends, powerful superheroes Sharkboy and Lavagirl, suddenly materialize on Earth to ask Max for help. Their planet is under threat of mighty villains and only the Max, the powerful dreamer, can assist the superheroes to win an evil. Writer and director Robert Rodriguez wrote the film's story in collaboration with his then seven-year-old son, Racer Rodriguez.
Peter Beaupre is the leader of a group of thieves who have stolen a valuable Air Force computer chip. When a bag mixup at the O'Hare Airport in Chicago causes Mrs. Hess, a grouchy old lady, to unknowingly take home the chip hidden inside of a toy remote control car, Beaupre and his followers Alice Ribbons, Earl Unger, and Burton Jernigan begin searching Mrs. Hess's neighborhood and breaking into houses searching for the chip. 8-year-old Alex Pruitt reports seeing Beaupre and his followers, but Alex's sister Molly, his brother Stan, and his parents Jack and Karen refuse to believe him. Beaupre and his followers figure out that the chip is in the Pruitt home, because Mrs. Hess has given the remote control car to Alex. Alex is left home alone with the chicken pox when Karen goes to work, Jack goes out of town on a business trip, and Molly and Stan go to school. When Beaupre and his followers break into the Pruitt house, Alex is ready with some of the most painful booby traps Beaupre and his gang will ever face.
The Police Academy misfits travel to Miami, Florida for their academy's commanding officer, Lassard, to receive a prestigious lifetime award pending his retirement, which takes a turn involving a group of jewel thieves after their stolen loot that Lassard unknowingly has in his possession.
Everyone makes mistakes. Kevin (Lance Bass) makes a fatal mistake: he meets the girl of his dreams (Emmanuelle Chriqui) on the subway but has no sufficient courage to ask her for her name or phone number. How can he find his subway sweetheart in the large city of Chicago? However, Kevin finds an ingenious solution. He sends his romantic story to the newspapers and poster the city with flyers displaying his number. As a result, Kevin's phone keeps ringing the whole day because hundreds of women are willing to meet him... What will happen next? Will the lost girl contact Kevin by phone?
Imagine two kids, Sally (Dakota Fanning) and Conrad Walden (Spencer Breslin), home alone with their pet fish. It is raining outside. While their wayward babysitter, Mrs. Kwan (Amy Hill), dozes off in the couch, the kids have nothing to do besides sit still and stare out of the window. Until their unexpected guest - a six-foot-tall talking cat, with a tall striped hat and more than a few tricks - appears. The wily Cat (Mike Myers) is determined to show Sally and Conrad that "it's good to have fun - but you have to know how!" and inveigles them into colorful, illogical, absurd misadventures. As a result, their house is all wrecked up and almost destroyed, the fish begins talking and moralizing... Mom’s party, as well as her career, is threatened with a hopeless failure. Can Sally and Conrad fix up things before their parents get back?
This side-splitting prequel to the Farrelly brothers' 1994 hit, Dumb & Dumber, tracks lovable goofballs Harry (Eric Christian Olsen) and Lloyd (Derek Richardson) during their high-school years. The dumb duo unwittingly gets engaged in the swindle of the venal Principal Collins (Eugene Levy). Learning of a grant of $100,000 for a special needs class, Collins and his mistress, head lunch lady Ms. Heller (Cheri Oteri), choose Harry and Lloyd to be the first students. Recruiting more students for the phony class, Harry and Lloyd unwittingly attract the attention of the beautiful Jessica Matthews (Rachel Nichols), the school's star reporter, who suspects foul play and decides to expose their wrongdoings. Can Harry and Lloyd save the situation or ... spoil it forever?
An amiable young man named Pistachio Disguisey (Dana Carvey) works as a waiter at a small Italian restaurant run by his father, Fabbrizio (James Brolin). The guy can't figure out why he has been unconsciously trying to change his appearance by imitating his customers. Unbeknownst to Pistachio, he comes from a family with supernatural skills of disguise. One night his father is kidnapped by his former nemesis Devlin Bowman (Brent Spiner), a nefarious villain who wants to use Fabbrizio's knack for mimicry in order to steal the world's greatest treasures. From this point on, Pistachio has to become a master of disguise and rescue his father with the help of his attractive assistant, Jennifer Baker (Jennifer Esposito).
Newlyweds Nick (Ice Cube) and Suzanne (Long) decide to move to the suburbs to provide a better life for their two kids. But their idea of a dream home is disturbed by a contractor (McGinley) with a bizarre approach to business.