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Cats and Dogs (2001)
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The best family films (like Chicken Run and Shrek) follow the
same formula that made the 1960s TV cartoon "Rocky and Bullwinkle" so beloved. Start with one part physical comedy and innocuous
humor for the kids and add enough clever asides, double entendres, and pop culture and
movie references to keep adults happy. The
latest entry to fit this description is Cats &
Dogs, a funny and inventive take on the classic struggle that legitimately merits the
phrase "fun for all ages."
The ad campaign for the film asks, "Who Will You Root
For?" but there's no doubt that its makers stand squarely behind Man's Best Friend. Here, cats are an evil horde bent on world
domination and dogs are the only barrier between them and success. The balance of power between cat and dog is a
tenuous one, soon to be upset forever by the work of Professor Brody (Jeff Goldblum) who
is trying to perfect a vaccine for people who are allergic to dogs. So naturally, the Feline Liberation Front wants to
sabotage Brody's efforts. They're led by a preening white Persian named Mr. Tinkles
(hilariously voiced by Sean Hayes of TV's "Will and Grace").
This Mr. T is a Machiavellian megalomaniac with no patience for
incompetence. He has ruthless teams of Siamese ninjas and Russian Blue demolition experts
at his disposal. Meanwhile, the Canine
Intelligence Service counters with their top agent Butch (Alec Baldwin) when a CIS agent
working undercover as the Brody family dog is catnapped. Butch
plans to plant another CIS operative at the Brody house but a slipup results in a rookie
beagle puppy named Lou (Tobey Maguire) ending up on the job. Butch adds other CIS agents (Chinese hairless Joe
Pantoliano and sheepdog Michael Clarke Duncan) to his team to battle the feline menace.
The film combines live animal action, CGI, and state-of-the-art
puppetry (supplied by Jim Henson's Creature Shop) to create a convincing world of covert
animal intrigue. These cats and dogs can
talk, use computers and collar radios, drive vehicles, and plant plastic explosives. But while they may be more shrewd than the humans
they live with, they still have their innate animal urges and limitations. A meeting hall filled with noisily arguing dogs is
quieted, not by rapping a gavel on a lectern, but by opening a can of dog food. Butch has a rocket sled at his disposal, but he
still needs to stick his head out the window while he's piloting it. And Mr. Tinkles may be leading troops aimed at
world conquest, but he nevertheless has to submit to being dressed up in frilly outfits by
his family's maid - causing Tinkles/Hayes to caustically sniff, "Evil does not wear a bonnet!"
Lawrence Guterman may be a recent film-school grad directing his first
feature, but here he demonstrates a veteran comic touch, deftly mixing enough pratfalls to
keep kids happy with classic movie scene parodies and periodic bon mots for their parents
(a surprised dog exclaims, "Son of my Mother!").
- Bob Aulert