Undemanding tykes will gets their giggles flowing with the Rube Goldberg-style contraptions invented for the dogs.
Hotel for Dogs (2009)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:106
Fresh:48
Rotten:58
Average Rating:5.2/10
Consensus: Hotel for Dogs may appeal to children and dog lovers, but it's ultimately contrived, predictable, and simplistic.
Theatrical Release:Jan 16, 2009 Wide
Box Office: $73,023,275
Synopsis: Thor Freudenthal makes his feature-film directorial debut with this adaptation of Lois Duncan’s children’s book HOTEL FOR DOGS. Sixteen-year old Andi (Emma Roberts) and her younger brother, Bruce... Thor Freudenthal makes his feature-film directorial debut with this adaptation of Lois Duncan’s children’s book HOTEL FOR DOGS. Sixteen-year old Andi (Emma Roberts) and her younger brother, Bruce (Jake T. Austin), are orphans living with their foster parents (Lisa Kudrow and Kevin Dillon), two washed-up musicians. Desperate to keep what’s left of their family together, Andi and Bruce have secretly been caring for their family dog, Friday, on the sly for the last few years. When they follow their beloved pet into an abandoned hotel and find stray dogs living there, Andi and Bruce decide to round up all the strays in the city and expand their family. With the help of Dave (Johnny Simmons) and Heather (Kyla Pratt), two teens who work at the local pet store, they transform the abandoned hotel into a canine wonderland, using young Bruce’s skills as an inventor to make an automated feeding system, doggie restrooms, and some fun amusements, such as a car-ride simulation and a fetching machine. But if Animal Control has their way, all the residents of the hotel will be taken to the pound, and it’s up to Andi and Bruce to save their new family. This heartwarming tale reinforces the importance of family and the idea that families can come in many shapes and sizes. Although the idea itself is pretty improbable, it’s still loads of fun to see the gadgets and gizmos that Bruce creates to keep the dogs fed, in shape, and content. Roberts and Austin are believable as brother and sister, and Kudrow and Dillon are amusing as washed-up '80s rockers. Don Cheadle also appears as the compassionate social worker assigned to Andi and Bruce’s case. [More]
Starring: Emma Roberts, Jake T. Austin, Kyla Pratt, Lisa Kudrow
Starring: Emma Roberts, Jake T. Austin, Kyla Pratt, Lisa Kudrow, Kevin Dillon, Don Cheadle
Director: Thor Freudenthal
Director: Thor Freudenthal
Screenwriter: Jeff Lowell
Producer: Lauren Shuler Donner, Jonathan Gordon, Ewan Leslie, Jason Clark
Composer: John Debney
Studio: Paramount Pictures
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Release:
Apr 28, 2009
DVD Features:
- Region [unknown]
- NTSC
- Keep Case - Sensormatic
- Full Frame
Audio:
- Dolby Digital 5.1 - English, French, Spanish
- Subtitles - English, French, Spanish
Additional Release Material:
Featurette:
- 1. A Home For Everyone: The Making Of Hotel For Dogs
- 2. That’s The Coolest Thing I’ve Ever Seen!
- 3. K-9 Casting
- 4. Bark On Cue!
- 5. The Pedigree® Adoption Drive
Audio Commentary:
- 1. Thor Freudenthal, Ewan "Jack" Leslie, Emma Roberts and Jake T. Austin
Text/Photo Galleries:
Photo Galleries:
- 1. Photo Galleries
Reviews for Hotel for Dogs
All that matters is that the loose ends of this sweet, kids-outsmart-the-adults fable are ultimately tied together nicely in a fashion certain to satisfy the average five year-old by the time the closing credits roll.
Not bad. It is funny and touching at times, even though the premise is pretty close to impossible.
You'll admire the doggie tricks and tolerate the rest, which is both the best and worst thing that can be said about it.
Até mesmo Cheadle e Kudrow, dois intérpretes normalmente confiáveis, parecem estar no piloto automático nesta produção que tem, como único atrativo, os truques de seu elenco de quatro patas.
The dogs are never quite as entertaining as they should be for the kids in the audience, and the hypercutesiness and speechifying at the end will lead to much tightening of adult sphincters.
Accompanying adults will be disappointed to see the talents of Lisa Kudrow wasted.
Anodyne family fare, Hotel is awash with all-American sentimentality but the many cute canines might just make it bearable for younger viewers.
The schmaltz is laid on thick, but kids love this sort of stuff and, refreshingly, the dog bits are done the old-fashioned, fun way: with animal trainers rather than CGI.
Despite all these reservations, many children will enjoy this picture, and it's the best-crafted, most entertaining Hollywood product of a very bad week.
Kids could do worse than check in at the two- star Hotel For Dogs this half-term.
It is a nice blend of slapstick fun, a little family pathos and a whole bunch of dogs of all shapes and sizes and is likely to be a popular draw for harassed parents looking for a little respite from the youngsters.
Inventive and endearing in places but ultimately an unsatisfying mix of slow plotting and superficial characterisation.
It needs something quite special to save this film from toxic splurges of sentiment. Lisa Kudrow and Kevin Dillon duly oblige as a pair of fabulously awful foster parents.
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