- Actors: Luke Wilson, Eddie Izzard, J.K. Simmons, Lewis Black, Kenan Thompson
- Director: Ash Brannon
- Disc Format: AC-3, Dolby, DTS Surround Sound, NTSC, Subtitled, Widescreen
- Language: English
- Subtitles: English, Spanish
- Region: Region A/1
- Rated: PG
- Studio: LIONSGATE
- Release Date: May 23, 2017
- Run Time: 90 minutes
Rock Dog resembles one of those generic
cartoons you put on for children, the kind that are not meant for adults and
provide only basic distraction for its intended younger audience. Don’t
anticipate any of the characters becoming a household name. If your child is
old enough to remember any of them, they are also likely too old to enjoy it.
More than anything, Rock Dog feels
like a poor amalgamation of several far more successful films in recent past.
Imagine Kung-Fu Panda combined with
Sing (and a little bit of Zootopia), but without any catchy music, none of the
awesome martial arts, and very few laughs. The animation also feels like it was
made a decade ago.
The film begins
with a hand-drawn prologue sequence that blatantly borrows both narratively and
stylistically from the Kung-Fu Panda franchise,
giving the back-story of a village of sheep in Tibet. After an attack from a group
of vicious wolves, only a mastiff named Khampa (voiced by J.K. Simmons) stands
in their way. In order to prevent future attacks, Khampa inexplicably bans
music and attempts to train his young son to follow in his footsteps, including
some type of unexplained mystical abilities that the dogs somehow have. But
Bodi (Luke Wilson) has less interest in the sheep and his responsibilities once
an airplane accidentally drops a radio into their village, introducing him to
the most generic of rock music.
The premise
taken from a Chinese graphic novel (Zheng Jun’s “Tibetan Rock Dog”) is
initially clever, but quickly wears out its welcome with generic slapstick and
predictable sentimentality. Bodi inevitably decides to follow his dream,
traveling to the city below in order to become a rock star like his idol, an
entitled British rock star cat named Angus Scattergood (Eddie Izzard). There
are many who don’t believe in Bodi’s abilities, so we know he will eventually
succeed. Where the film takes a strange turn is in the decision to have the
wolves follow Bodi into the city. Already over-stuffed, the narrative then
begins to integrate gangster narratives as the incompetent wolf crew tries to
take Bodi out, losing sight of the sheep that they supposedly still desire.
Rock Dog is harmless entertainment, but
that doesn’t make it at all good. As a Chinese-Hollywood co-production that
feels developed to imitate previous animated successes, this is the type of
film that feels formed in a board room, using algorithms for success rather
than any inspired creativity or individuality that the narrative ironically
promotes. And for a film about an aspiring musician, many will be disappointed
by how little music there actually is amidst the various threads of the
narrative.
The Blu-ray
release comes with a DVD and Digital HD copy, as well as the extras included on
the disc itself. Those include four featurettes and a music video. There is a
typical making-of featurette, as well as one about the casting of the voice
actors. The other two focus on the music and the animation in the film.
Entertainment Value:
4/10
Quality of Filmmaking:
4/10
Historical
Significance: 2/10
Special Features: 5/10
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