| SNOW DOGS |
2002 –
USA
Director: Brian Levant - Reviewed by Frankie
This, however, isn't to say that Snow Dogs is in any way a good or original film. It's more by-the-book than any other recent kid movie, but salvages itself with energetic performances and by keeping the dogs silent. Ted Brooks is a high-profile Miami dentist who finds out he was adopted. His real mother is recently deceased, and lived in Tolketna, a small town in Alaska. Ted flies to Alaska for the reading of her will. His inheritance is a pack of champion sled dogs. He tries dog sledding, but is, of course, terrible. He stays in Tolketna hoping to find his birth father. He eventually does find his father, love, and himself in the process. The result is sort of an Iron Will meets Max Keeble's Big Move. The above summary may be a bit schmaltzy for a film shameless enough to have a skunk squirt fluid directly into the camera. Luckily, there are a few jokes for adults, mostly racial ones that flew right over the kids' heads. Like the recent Jimmy Neutron: Boy Genius, I found myself laughing more often than the tyke audience. Cuba Gooding Jr. continues with the Supporting Actor's Oscar curse (recently broken by Marisa Tomei with her In the Bedroom performance), and while his performance is just what the script requires, it's no Chill Factor. James Coburn seems quite excited to be playing Thunder Jack, a local grizzly-tough dog racer. The biggest laughs, however, come from singer Sisqó, who plays Gooding's dental assistant, and Nichelle Nichols, who plays Gooding's adoptive mother. Both steal every scene they're in. And as for the dogs, well they're pretty cute as to be expected. With all the fabulous Disney films released in memory (The Princess Diaries and Toy Story 2 being examples), the studio, for some reason, still thinks we want more of the same old formula thing. Snow Dogs is one of those movies. It's so utterly predictable and cornball that I wouldn't recommend seeing it willingly, but you won't be bored if your kids drag you along. |
|
Home
| Currently Playing | For
Rent | Video Obsession ©2002 Moviepie e-mail us |