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Three litters of puppies go from cute to cuter during the first few months of their lives; a trio of Rhodesian Ridgebacks runs circles around their mom; fluffy Chow Chow puppies have heaps of attitude; a Havanese has her paws full with five puppies.
Lily in Love (alternative English title: Playing for Keeps, Hungarian title: Játszani kell) is a 1984 Hungarian–American co-production in English starring Christopher Plummer, Maggie Smith and Elke Sommer and directed by Károly Makk.
Laura is falling in love with Fabrizio, while he displays a new sexual awareness of her masked by his malice. Fabrizio becomes inexplicably cruel. He accelerates his unwarranted torment of Laura in many ways, including tying her up and putting a snake near her and killing a pet bird she is fond of.
About a big dog and a little dog who aren't very smart and their everyday misadventures. Big Tony and Little Sal Dachshund: The Casagrandes: Vito Filliponio's pet dogs whom Ronnie Anne and Sid walked in the episode "Walk Don't Run". Big Tony loves to chase squirrels, and Little Sal thinks that he is a cat. Billy Beagle Beagle
Higgins, a small Poodle-Schnauzer mix, played the leading role of Benji in the movie of the same name and had a recurring role on the TV series Petticoat Junction. Jean, the Vitagraph Dog, a Scotch Collie who is the screen's first leading canine to have her name in the film title; starred in movies from 1908 to 1913.
In the video that @picsofpoppy shared, it shows a Schnauzer tucked between two people on the boat. Everyone around the dog was facing in, but the pup was turned out to the water and was carefully ...
A love interest of Rover; about a showgirl's dog who gets abducted and ends up working on a farm. Dante Xoloitzcuintle: Coco: Miguel's pet dog and friend. Desert Flower Yellow Coonhound: The Good, the Bad, and Huckleberry Hound: A Native American maiden hound, the daughter of the chief and the love interest, and later wife, of Huckleberry Hound ...
"Love means never having to say you're sorry" is a catchphrase based on a line from the Erich Segal novel Love Story and was popularized by its 1970 film adaptation starring Ali MacGraw and Ryan O'Neal. The line is spoken twice in the film: once in the middle of the film, by Jennifer Cavalleri (MacGraw's character), when Oliver Barrett (O'Neal ...