101 Dalmatians

by Stephen Herek (Director)

Other authorsDodie Smith (Author), Bill Peet (Author), Hugh Laurie (Actor), Hugh Fraser (Actor), Mark Williams (Actor), John Hughes (Author), John Hughes (Producer), Joely Richardson (Actor), Joan Plowright (Actor), Tim McInnerny (Actor), Frank Welker (Actor)5 more, Jeff Daniels (Actor), Glenn Close (Actor), John Shrapnel (Actor), Ricardo Mestres (Producer), Zohren Weiss (Actor)
DVD, 2012

Description

In their small London flat, Dalmatians Pongo and Perdy, along with their human pets Roger and Anita, are overjoyed by the arrival of their litter of 15 puppies. But when the spotted-fur-loving Cruella De Vil and her clumsy cohorts, Jasper and Horace, dognap the litter along with every other Dalmatian pup in London, it will be up to Pongo and Perdy to rally the town's animals to aid in the puppies rescue. Now the puppies have to outwit their captors and bring on a final showdown with Cruella.

Language

Original language

English

Original publication date

1996

Publication

Walt Disney Pictures (2012)

Library's rating

Library's review

In lieu of recent years' onslaught of Disney live action remakes, this mid-nineties early attempt is quite interesting in how it stays close to the original, but feels free to expand, update and alter where it suits it to. And the first half of the film is really quite good, if you can get on board
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for the over-the-top/arch silliness. It loses all its steam, though, when the middle of the film spends 15 minutes on no-dialogue scenes of exposition hijinks of dogs and various other trained animals running around on the screen. While (like the rest of the film) technically impressive animal acting, that would not have entertained me, even as a child. After this, the climax of the movie is unfortunately a weak Home Alone-impression of endless slapstick on ice, which is admittedly probably quite entertaining to children, but unlike the first half of the movie holds little merit for older co-viewers. All in all an uneven film, but considering the animated original is one of Disney's weaker classics, it is still a surprisingly solid remake, with an impressive cast list. Unfortunately, excepting perhaps Tim McInnerny and the extreme performance (at least if you're the sort who don't cringe too easily) of Glenn Close, the cast doesn't get too much of interest to do, but they certainly do what they can to keep you interested, even through the weakest of the slapstick gags. I have a soft spot for the quality animation work in the old one, but that concern aside, I'd probably say they are about as good, and can be watched fairly interchangeably. In short -- the film is entertaining enough for younger children, but in the back half falls a rather short of the entertaining-for-the-whole-family ideal that the beginning of the film made a fair attempt at.
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Rating

(18 ratings; 3.4)

User reviews

LibraryThing member KunmingERC
Dalmatians Pongo and Perdita settle into their owners' flat in London to become proud parents of 15 precocious pups. It's one big happy dog family until the evil Cruella De Vil kidnaps the puppies, along with every other Dalmatian in the city. It's up to Pongo and Perdita to unite the entire animal
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population in a mission to help the courageous pups outsmart their captor.
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