Trivia: Baby Connie was played by Dan Aykroyd's real life daughter, Danielle Aykroyd.
Trivia: Max Pomeranc, who plays Josh, is himself a strong chess player. At the time this film was made, he was ranked among the top 100 in the nation for his age group.
Trivia: In the scene near the end where Wayne is on the phone with Cassandra's father, and he tells Wayne of Cassandra's marriage to Bobby, the whole thing is dubbed in English except for the last thing that Wayne says to Jeff. That last sentence, translated from Cantonese into English, is "Where is the toilet?"
Trivia: When Molly crashes the cab, you see the advertisement on the top of the cab reads "Senor Pizza." This was the name of the pizza place in the movie Loverboy, which Kirstie Alley was in.
Trivia: The film was released as "Dennis" in the United Kingdom in order to avoid confusion with the British comic strip character, "Dennis the Menace."
Trivia: Director Oliver Stone has a cameo as the man who tries to convince the reporter that the president is not the same man as he used to be.
Trivia: When Max is chasing the cat, the scene was accomplished by training the cat and dog together so they'd be comfortable. The cat was being trained to run towards a toy, while the dog was trained to run towards a trainer making hand signals a short distance away from the cat-toy. If you pay very close attention, there's actually one point in the scene where you can tell that they're running in ever-so-slightly different directions.
Trivia: With a final production budget of $13 Million, "Freaked" was a boxoffice disaster, grossing just under $30,000 in two theatres. Due to studio shake-ups at 20th Century Fox, the film's post-production budget had been cut and its advertising campaign was cancelled. After a number of bad test screenings, the movie was pulled from nationwide release, finally going to VHS in early 1994. Nonetheless, the film gained almost immediate cult status, which it retains to this day.
Trivia: Bobby McFerrin's arrangement of "The Pink Panther Theme" is unique in that it was the only version performed a cappella.
Trivia: This comedy features several future stars. It was the feature film debut of Matthew Fox of "Lost" fame and superstar Matthew McConaughey (albeit in a very small role). It's one of Philip Seymour Hoffman's earliest movies. And it would have also been Renée Zellweger's feature film debut, but her scene was cut before release.