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Hotel for Dogs Movie Review
Hotel for Dogs Review

"Hotel for Dogs" Overview

Rating: PG
2009
Cast and Crew
Director : Thor FreudenthalProducer : Jonathan Gordon,Ewan Leslie,Lauren Shuler Donner
Screenwiter : Jeff Lowell,Robert Schooley,Mark McCorkle
Starring : Emma Roberts,Jake Austin,Don Cheadle,Johnny Simmons,Kyla Pratt,Lisa Kudrow,Kevin Dillon,Troy Gentile
Recently, film critic Roger Ebert has been bemoaning the fact that even bad
movies look good. If he were putting together a list of such flicks, Hotel for
Dogs would surely make the top five. It looks great. And it's bad. Really bad.
Hotel for Dogs clearly wants to rank alongside films such as Anna to the
Infinite Power, The Goonies, E.T., and Radio Flyer, films that balanced
lighthearted playfulness with a darker, grittier reality. Like the recent
Spiderwick Chronicles, Hotel for Dogs plays all the same Spielberg/Donner riffs
(a cast of doe-eyed youngsters wise beyond their years dressed in corduroy and
plaid, moments of adult menace cut with "oh, thank goodness" relief) and even
apes the look of these early '80s flicks. Yet for all its nostalgic bravado,
the film never feels more than surface, more than flash.
Andi (Emma Roberts, who is 23 but looks to be 13) and Bruce (Jake Austin) are
two orphans (read: mischievous but oh so sweet) living with bumbling foster
parents (Lisa Kudrow and Kevin Dillon in butt-rock mode as barely-making-it
musicians) who don't know about the existence of the kids' little dog, Friday.
Bruce is something of a technical wunderkind, having devised all manner of Rube
Goldbergian devices to keep Friday hidden, but even he has difficulty keeping
Friday out of the grasp of a Brazil-styled army of stormtrooper dog catchers.
Fearing their foster parents will find Friday, the kids hide him in a
dilapidated hotel (where there are priceless fixtures just lying about and the
electricity is still running) that quickly becomes a makeshift shelter for the
city's well-behaved curs.
Bruce being Bruce, the hotel is outfitted with all manner of mechanical devices
to keep the dogs occupied (the best is a car ride simulator), fed (at a long
table), and clean (both a dog wash and a toilet service). The wonky machines
(they should have ACME stamped on their sides) are fun but hopelessly fraught
with problems (as soon as Bruce steps away they start breaking down), and it's
never clear why the dogs would actually use them.
Add a love interest (kindly pet store employee Johnny Simmons), an overly
concerned social worker (Don Cheadle), and a montage (complete with Tomoyasu
Hotei's instrumental "Battle Without Honor or Humanity," as heard in Kill
Bill), and Hotel for Dogs rapidly degenerates into every other cheesy tween
movie aired on Nickelodeon.
The script is ramshackle and cliché ridden, the performances narrowed down to
gawking (Roberts is particularly dull), and the story, when it isn't sappy,
misses all the good beats. Clearly, the film should have abandoned its human
cast and just let the dogs run crazy in a hotel. I've never been so eager to
relive the simple joys of Benji the Hunted. And as I mentioned at the outset,
the film looks really good. Director Thor Freudenthal (a first-time helmer) and
cinematographer Michael Grady (Wonderland) shoot the film as though it were one
of the Coen brothers' early thrillers. The lighting, the crane shots, I've
never seen so much wasted atmosphere.
For all its clever cinematography and dramatic play-acting, Hotel for Dogs
loses steam and sense whenever the dogs are off the screen. Small children
might enjoy the film but it's unlikely they'll want to revisit it. Perhaps one
day there will be a fan edit of Hotel for Dogs removing all the people and
strained dialog -- a 20-minute highlight reel of the mutts just letting loose
-- and that will be something worth seeing.
If they catch the rabbit, they never race again.
|
Review by Keith Breese
|
An incredibly STUPID Movie.
Improbable from the outset, the Plot is so unbelievable as to slap one upside
the Head, and cause one's goodnatured Suspension of Disbelief to turn into
unmitigated Dry-Heaves.
It's a shame that so much Canine Talent was wasted on this bestial
Monstrosity. At least the "Benji" Movies had a followable Plot !
This steaming little pile of Scat is neither funny, nor well-written. The
Canine Actors are very good, all told... but they were wasted by the
incredibly untalented Direction.
Really... Director Thor Freudenthal needs to go back to the Pot-bars in
Amsterdam (or wherever he smokes his stuff) for some better Ideas on how to
make Movies.
This MIGHT have been a clever Movie... but it came off as so over-done and
meaningless, as to be nauseatingly insipid.
Didn't the Movies deal with poorly-filmed Teenaged-Angst-with-Puppies 20 years
ago ??
Benji would c**k his leg on this Steaming Stinko.
Emma Roberts is 17, not 23.
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