


I've never really played a character like that before, so it was great fun to tap into that side of myself." Hopefully he feels like I did," Wolf said. "I was playing this real-life person who's incredibly accomplished, whose work I have huge admiration for, so wanted to do it justice, wanted to do him justice. In the flick, Wolf stars as Matt Zarrella, who created the elite K-9 training for the Rhode Island State Police, a character unlike any other he's ever played.
SCOTT WOLF MOVIE
I knew, being a movie that was centered around dogs, that it would grab my heart, but the idea that it was this true story, this remarkable story, of these two underdogs who couldn't figure themselves out alone, and together they brought the best out in each other and became everything they were meant to be." "Who doesn't love a good dog movie? The minute I heard it's a story about a guy and his dog I was interested, but then it's sort of more than your average dog movie," Wolf told ET. Professionally, Wolf is excitedly promoting his latest film, Rescued by Ruby, which tells the true story of a state trooper who partnered with a fellow underdog to fulfill his dream of joining an elite K-9 unit. "I'm quite the fan of him too," Limp gushed in turn. She's too much of a force of life and she's too much love and kindness for me to have planned." She has given me a life beyond my wildest dreams. "I knew I wanted to find my person, I wanted to be married, I wanted to eventually have a family, but it's hard to know exactly what it is that you're looking for sometimes," Wolf said. The actor and his wife, the author of Finding Love Over Worry, remain more in love than ever, after initially meeting via a blind date and tying the knot in 2004. "We had a conversation of, should we watch it with the kids?" Limp told ET. The continued popularity of the show has made Wolf and his wife, Kelley Limp, consider showing it to their three kids, Lucy, 7, Miller, 9, and Jackson, 12. "It's been all this time, so to be part of something that has that kind of powerful emotional connection with people is huge. "One of the incredible things about that show was you hope to be part of things that mean something to people, and so when fans of that show come up, there's this emotion in them and connection to the show as if it just aired last Monday night," Wolf said.

There hasn't been an occasion to really do it since."Īs the actors were "reminiscing" over their time on the series, they marveled at the lasting impact the show has on people, more than two decades after its premiere. Verified email at - Homepage Social PsychologyPersonality Psychology. "We hadn't had a chance to do anything like that together that kind of centered around Party of Five in over 20 years," he continued. We were together for a long time making that show. That whole group is like a second family. Wolf's openness to reboot potential came shortly after he reunited with Neve Campbell and Lacey Chabert, his Party of Five co-stars, at 90s Con. "The one thing I think all of us feel is it'd be so good to know what those people are up to now, what life looks like to them now. "I always said I don't think so, because, at the time, we told the story and we set the story down, but those are characters," Wolf told ET.
SCOTT WOLF SERIES
ET's Rachel Smith spoke with the 53-year-old actor about his new flick, Rescued by Ruby, as well as the possibility of rebooting the beloved '90s series that went off the air in 2000. While all series regular cast members manage to survive, the emotional ramifications of the incident have a severe impact on NCIS Chief Medical Examiner Donald "Ducky" Mallard (David McCallum), who suffers a heart attack upon hearing the news.Scott Wolf isn't shutting down a potential Party of Fivereboot. Mere seconds after Gibbs departs the vehicle, Dearing's bomb explodes, killing Cole and numerous other NCIS personnel. After the two locate the device, Cole urges Gibbs to leave, while he will attempt to disarm the explosive. Later, while a handcuffed Cole sits in the NCIS bullpen, Gibbs and Vance come to the conclusion that Dearing has planted a bomb in the director's vehicle, the sole purpose of his prior kidnapping. Though Cole appears somewhat skeptical of the offer, he quickly comes to side with Gibbs and it, telling Gibbs that the threat of death "isn't the downside, it's the fun." Sadly, Gibbs and Cole's planned operation against Dearing proves unsuccessful and they walk away empty handed. He has Cole transferred from his prison cell to interrogation and attempts to recruit him to assist in their efforts against Dearing. As the NCIS investigation hits continuous roadblocks, Gibbs decides to get a little creative.
