Morgan and Jason are two of the most ineligible bachelors in town. Budding philosophers, they pride themselves on their resistance to the female art of persuasion, as they travel the Califor... Read allMorgan and Jason are two of the most ineligible bachelors in town. Budding philosophers, they pride themselves on their resistance to the female art of persuasion, as they travel the California coast washing dishes to earn their keep.Morgan and Jason are two of the most ineligible bachelors in town. Budding philosophers, they pride themselves on their resistance to the female art of persuasion, as they travel the California coast washing dishes to earn their keep.
- Director
- Writers
- Stars
- Awards
- 1 nomination total
Steven Martini
- David
- (as Steve Martini)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
This is a film worth sitting down and watching and you can see a very young Shannon Elizabeth and Frodo, and there is some funny scenes all the way through.
Perhaps it was the style back then but watching this film made me aware of why you need to have high steaks and lots of crazy action in scenes for comedy movies because if it's simply just dialogue between characters it ends up falling into being just flat scenes. Having a more comedy actor to partner Xean Astin
There's some great cinematography especially in Malibu, and the cast has gone on to become well-established. I wish there was some more crazyness and pumped up music to give this film some extra comedy energy.
Perhaps it was the style back then but watching this film made me aware of why you need to have high steaks and lots of crazy action in scenes for comedy movies because if it's simply just dialogue between characters it ends up falling into being just flat scenes. Having a more comedy actor to partner Xean Astin
There's some great cinematography especially in Malibu, and the cast has gone on to become well-established. I wish there was some more crazyness and pumped up music to give this film some extra comedy energy.
Seen the movie on TV yesterday. And now commenting on it. Well, that's a movie of two genres (so, if you call them genre...): Road-feel good movie. And there's philosophy also. Two friends who love dishwashing. Morgan (Sean Astin), the philosophic one, and Jason (Matthew Lillard-finally a role which made me like him!) the more sweet one, who loves the life&Molly. Well, i don't know if it will show up on video (or it did already), but well, it's kind of movie that you shouldn't buy but you can watch on TV, and enjoy. There are in the way too much chattering of Morgan sometime, but still a real thing to make you watch it: Matt Lillard sings a love song in the end! :)
Morgan(Sean Astin)and Jason(Matt Lillard)star as 'Dish Dogs', two buddy philosophers who travel the world, free of commitment, taking up dishwashing jobs at various restaurants across the country. Morgan is the the talkative one. Blah-blah-blah, immovable rocks and omnipotent gods. And Jason is the free-spirited sidekick who is basically just "going along" with Morgan's philosophical lifestyle. So, when they return home for a friend's wedding, Jason rekindles his relationship with an old flame Molly(Ward)and Morgan is left to do some soul searching. And, believe it or not, he ends up falling for ball-busting stripper Anne(Shannon Elizabeth), much to his own dismay. These two film stars are kind of an odd couple...
Anyway, 'Dish Dogs' is pretty amusing, and the script very rarely takes itself seriously. I do think that Sean Astin kind of talks too much, though. This may turn the viewer off, but I would recommend sticking with it. The second half of the film is much better than the first half because Morgan has to confront reality and stop asking those unanswerable questions about love and marriage. The ending is pretty cool, too, I guess.
5/10 is my vote. It has its good points.
Anyway, 'Dish Dogs' is pretty amusing, and the script very rarely takes itself seriously. I do think that Sean Astin kind of talks too much, though. This may turn the viewer off, but I would recommend sticking with it. The second half of the film is much better than the first half because Morgan has to confront reality and stop asking those unanswerable questions about love and marriage. The ending is pretty cool, too, I guess.
5/10 is my vote. It has its good points.
I'll give the other comment-giver a little bit of credit... but I found this movie to be insanely cute and very cool. I found it out only because I was a huge fan of Sean Astin in LOTR, but as I watched it and pulled more away from just loving to see Sean, I found it really groovy stuff!! Writers and directors use the same story lines and plots all the time! This thing was totally different and maybe not as realistic as we'd like it to be, but it IS still realistic. Hell, I'd be a dish dog if I had Matt Lillard and Sean Astin by my side... AND a hot stripper. It may not have been as good as I had hoped... but I do give it something for the originality and getting me to REALLY eat at a chip, lol.
It isn't a bad movie it's just not a great one. If you don't mind a simple film with nice likable characters then watch it. Its simple but fun when you have nothing else to do.
The reason I watched it was because I was a Sean Astin fan. And if you are then it's cool simply because he's in it. Although I was surprised because there is some funny moments and some quite touching moments too which was surprising. And Matthew (Lillard) singing at the end was fantastic.
It isn't a fantastic movie but give it a go it might surprise you, just don't expect anything too much.
The reason I watched it was because I was a Sean Astin fan. And if you are then it's cool simply because he's in it. Although I was surprised because there is some funny moments and some quite touching moments too which was surprising. And Matthew (Lillard) singing at the end was fantastic.
It isn't a fantastic movie but give it a go it might surprise you, just don't expect anything too much.
Did you know
- TriviaThe movie was actually shot and completed in 1998.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Diminishing Returns Diminisodes: March 2019 Time Capsule (2019)
- SoundtracksCouldn't Be Better
Written and Performed by Kelly Keeling and Carmine Appice
Featuring harmonica solo by Denny Laine
Details
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content