Good Boy! Movie Review
Good Boy! Review

"Good Boy!" Overview

Rating: PG
2003
Cast and Crew
Director : John HoffmanProducer : Kristine Belson,Lisa Henson
Screenwiter : John Hoffman
Starring : Liam Aiken,Kevin Nealon,Molly Shannon,Matthew Broderick,Carl Reiner,Brittany Murphy,Delta Burke,Donald Faison,Vanessa Redgrave
Man’s best friend: an expression used for ages to describe the relationship
between people and their dogs. Rarely has there been a need to question a
canine’s faith, but after watching Good Boy!, it makes me wonder if what we’ve
been saying for years is right.
Twelve year-old Owen Baker (Liam Aiken) has spent his summer break walking the
neighborhood dogs to prove to his parents (Molly Shannon and Kevin Nealon) that
he is responsible enough to have a dog of his own. The dog Owen eventually
adopts, which he names Hubble, proves to be much smarter than the ordinary
canine; Hubble instantly knows how to sit, stay, roll over, and even play dead.
Based on his previous training experience, Owen finds this degree of
intelligence extremely odd. In search of answers, late one night Owen follows
Hubble into the woods near their home; there he sees his new dog communicating
with a bright light in the sky.
Several cheesy special effects later, Owen is now somehow able to communicate
with Hubble and all of the other dogs he walks, as if they were all human.
Hubble (voiced by Matthew Broderick) explains that thousands of years ago dogs
descended to Earth from the planet Sirius to overtake mankind, and that he was
sent on a mission commissioned by the “Greater Dane” to inspect their progress.
Of course what Hubble finds is a society of dogs that have strayed from their
original mission to colonize; now it is up to Owen to help Hubble improve the
manners of the neighbor dogs before the arrival of the Greater Dane. If they
can’t get their act together, the Earth’s dogs will be sent back to Sirius for
some serious remedial training.
Though marketed as a family film, the values in Good Boy! unfortunately taste
like stale dog treats. Owen’s parents seem more concerned with selling their
house than with the welfare of their son as he wonders off into the woods after
dark. Instead of scenes re-enforcing Owen’s high degree of responsibility, we
get a completely useless helping of some bullies who make fun of Owen for
wearing his dog-walking uniform and talking with the dogs. Additionally, once
we hit the central conflict, the film lingers for too long on the saddest
moments before resolution is reached. Younger viewers may especially have some
difficulty with these scenes.
The story is way out there, and the acting is completely over the top,
especially from Saturday Night Live alums Shannon and Nealon. While it’s a
little too far-fetched for adult viewing, young kids will find it a funny
exploration watching the four-legged furry friends communicate. The voice cast
features the likes of Carl Reiner as a gas-passing shepard; Brittany Murphy as
a fragile Italian greyhound; Delta Burke as a prim and proper poodle; and
Donald Faison as a treat-loving boxer. As Owen (the only human worth paying
attention to), Aiken takes command of the film with his bright smile. Along
with the talking canines, Aiken prevents the film from being complete dog meat.
Though we may think we know on occasion what our dogs need, we’ll never really
know what they are saying. Good Boy! makes enough of an impression that it will
always give us cause to wonder.
I'm not quite sure who'll sit through all the extras on the Good Boy! DVD,
including commentary track, deleted scenes, and a ton of making-of featurettes
and other behind-the-scenes footage. But if you're a fan, well, you'll thrill
to all the extra Hubble time you get.
Meeting of the minds.
Reviewer: David Levine



