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Review: Yellowbrickroad
Reviews
Underdog
Lacking the orginal bite
By
TOM MEEK
|
August 7, 2007
UNDERDOG
2.0
Stars
VIDEO: Watch the trailer for
Underdog
.
Disney’s live-action send-up of the campy ’60s cartoon loses far too much of the original’s bite to beg comparison. To compensate, director Frederik Du Chau (
Racing Stripes
) and the team of writers toss in a myriad of maudlin human underdog stories, with Jack (Alex Neuberger), a motherless boy, coming to terms with his grief and with his difficult father, Dan (James Belushi), a former cop slumming it as a security guard. They take in the bolstered beagle, who’s newly escaped from the lab of a mad scientist (Peter Dinklage hamming it up appropriately), and find cause for self-discovery and healing. The film is at its best, of course, when the caped canine is bolting around thwarting crime, but that comes late, and the FX are underachievers. More troubling is the casting of Jason Lee as Shoeshine/Underdog’s voice. The
My Name Is Earl
star sounds scruffy enough, but it just doesn’t fit. No savior here, just a tired retread.
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ARTICLES BY TOM MEEK
REVIEW: GOD BLESS AMERICA
| May 17, 2012
The latest dark comedy from Bobcat Goldthwait tackles both vapid celebrity culture ( i.e. , Paris Hilton, the Kardashians, and American Idol ) and the indignity of being an office drone.
REVIEW: THE PIRATES! BAND OF MISFITS
| April 24, 2012
Peter Lord, animator behind claymation staples Wallace & Gromit and Chicken Run , directs this very British, very dry romp on the high seas during the time when Britannia did indeed rule the waves.
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| April 18, 2012
The latest dark comedy from Bobcat Goldthwait tackles both vapid celebrity culture (i.e., Paris Hilton, the Kardashians and American Idol) and the indignity of being an office drone.
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| March 15, 2012
Dan Lindsay and T. J. Martin's Oscar-winning documentary about an underequipped high-school football team competing against big-time programs across Tennessee offers a potent contemplation on race and opportunity.
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| March 01, 2012
Regrettably, this team loses a lot of Seuss's quirkiness, though not the message about corporate greed and slash-and-burn imperialism.
See all articles by:
TOM MEEK
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