Saturday, October 27, 2018

DVD Review: Hotel for Dogs (70 dogs. . . . )


DVD Review:  Hotel For Dogs with Emma Roberts and Don Cheadle (Paramount Studio, 2009/2017, 1 hour and 39 minutes, PG) See the trailer here



It’s Time to Revisit the Canine Classics

It’s that time of year again when the family stays home on a chilly Friday, Saturday or Sunday evening to watch a movie - together with the dogs, a pizza delivered and some popcorn – maybe even a neighbor kid or two.

So, let’s revisit some canine classics like Hotel for Dogs (2009) with Julia Roberts’ niece Emma (who is also known for her Nancy Drew) and Don Cheadle, the Academy Award nominee for Hotel Rwanda.



A Dog’s Eye View of New York City

It all starts with Friday, the whitest cutest dog in all of New York City, and a young human Bruce (11 years old) and his sister Andi (16) – a duo in crime with Bruce, a budding young Rube Goldberg*, and Andi, a consummate liar when necessary.

The cast includes “foster parents from hell” (questionable rock stars [one being Lisa Kudrow!] who lock the food up), and perfect social worker Bernie.

Oh, and nearly 70 dogs, the predictable ‘car chase’ in reverse and a predictable ending that everyone will love!!


How the Hotel Francis Duke became the Hotel for Dogs

Thinly disguised New York City or Chicago is the setting for this underrated family flick about a brother-sister duo in foster care and the pet dog they have to take care of, sneakily, since the fosters dislike them and dogs.

The kids and dog stumble onto and into an abandoned hotel, the Hotel Francis Duke, and somehow start collecting stray dogs along with three good friends in crime (including a love interest) but also have to run from the police and Animal Control.

How they manage to do all this and find a new family makes for inspiring family fare.

Because it’s about family and all about family.



Incidentals

The pet food store van has paws and a tail and two of the canines also begin a relationship – Chinese Crested Romeo and white poodle Juliet.

A Dog’s Nose, Up Close and Personal

See New York (Central City) from the point of view of a dog - a pug, a lemon beagle, a St. Bernard, a lab, a Boston, a Mastiff, a Shar Pei, a Golden – Georgia and Henry and Lenny and Chelsea and Cooper, but most of the dogs are all-Americans and each shelter dog was adopted at the end of the movie!


First, A Book


Lois Duncan wrote Hotel for Dogs in 1971 and rewrote it in advance of the movie coming out, with movie details, slightly changed from the original. Duncan appears in the movie and then published two sequels: News for Dogs in 2009


followed by Movie for Dogs (2010).



And, did you know Duncan also wrote a slew of other books, including I Know What You Did Last Summer?



*The contraptions young Bruce comes up with are worth the price of admission: automatic feeding machines that pour kibble from Pedigree dog food cans into bowls at precisely 5 pm, fountains that dogs pee in and exit from by stepping on a platform that causes the fountain to spray water in a self-cleaning manner, ‘toilets’ that collect and bag the poop then put them on an assembly line to toss outside, mechanical ball fetching (throwing) machines, simulated car rides complete with changing scenery and wind, mechanical sheep on bumper cars for border collie Shep to herd, an automatic car wash for dogs – you get the picture. Now, get the movie!

Tuesday, October 23, 2018

Book Review: Just a Dog (boy, family, big dog, funniness)


Just a Dog by Michael Bauer (Scholastic, 2012, 135 pages, $9.99 PB, ages 10 and up, especially for the 8-12 bunch)


Can DogEvals pick the Book of the Year for 2018 so early? Can we even pick the Book of the Year for 2018 if it was published in 2012?

If so, Just a Dog is it!

It’s not just a book, just as it’s not just a dog.

The Story

Our hero Corey grows up in about a year, his tenth, though he remembers when he was three, before his two sisters arrived in the family. And you too will remember what you thought at that age – and it just may help with your own 10-year-old.

Or is he the hero? Some might say the big clumsy oaf of a dog (part Great Dane, part Dalmatian) is the hero, the glue that keeps the family together, the family member that everyone talks to – in confidence.

Mister Mosely was a small puppy who grew up to be a very large dog – white except for a black tear dripping down his face and a heart-shaped splotch on his chest. It seems his heart was too big to fit it all inside so part of it stayed on the outside to remind people to be good. Mister Mosely seems to know just what everyone needs in this life and beyond. His stories live on in everyone’s memory.

Everyone Wants a Mister Mosely

Even though Just a Dog was written by Aussie Michael Bauer and takes place ‘down under,’ there are very few clues to that effect  - so few that a young reader may not even notice them.

But young readers will certainly notice Mister Mosely the dog and how he got his name and how he got his home and how he learned to wait - and the one trick he learned that he ended up teaching everyone in the family in the end.

Just a Dog is a book for your second grader to read, one short chapter at a time – to you. It will last a month (29 chapters) so you can discuss the facts of life and death, so you can laugh with your child at the hilarious memories that live on in every unfunny family like the one in the book - and like yours. Each chapter relates to one or two before it and a few to come (very well-written) and each story will tickle your fancy.

Read it First or Read it With

Author Bauer has penned a magical story that may have been based on his own childhood (or yours, to reminisce). There are, however, some adult themes that may be grounds for discussion – unemployment, jealousy, a car accident, cancer – but a mature 10-year-old will gloss over them and just remember Mister Mosely being afraid of thunder and Mister Mosely mysteriously disappearing for two weeks (in the manner of Agatha Christie) and Mister Mosely always being there for everyone and protective, too. And knowing that Mom was going to have a baby before even Mom knew it!

 Caveat: This book was purchased for review because the cover dog looked like a dog we know named Pirate!

Friday, October 19, 2018

DVD Review: Kit Kittredge, American Girl (dog, Depression, mystery)


Kit Kittredge: An American Girl, with Stanley Tucci, Joan Cusack and Julia Ormond, produced by Julia Roberts (New Line Home Video, 2008, 101 minutes, $7.39, rated G)



You love the American Girl book series, you have your favorite girl and era, maybe even a doll or two. Now watch the movie, Kit Kittredge: An American Girl.

Hobo signs, hobo jungle, hobo stew and a hobo friend or two – yes, back in those years, a girl could go exploring on her own – downtown to ask for a job at the newspaper or even to the local hobo camp.

Yes, of course, our American girl has a dog: Grace. The given-away-to-anyone Bassett is adorable. How Grace came to belong to Kit’s family is quite a story in itself, not to be forgotten because it serves as the background to the times, the Great Depression of the 1930s.

Kit Kittredge, budding reporter at 10 years old in Cincinnati, Ohio, is also adorable and wise beyond her years – lucky, too. This plucky girl manages to solve a robbery, unmask a criminal and get her story published in the local town paper bringing in needed money for her family.


The year was 1934. Mothers wore gloves and little girls wore dresses and men wore hats. Kittredge Motors is taken over (foreclosed) by the bank so the family grows vegetables, sells eggs, takes in borders: a librarian who can drive the bookmobile but can’t seem to find the brakes, a magician, a dance teacher. (Is one of these the criminal?)

And fathers go off to Chicago and New York City, looking for work. Kit’s father writes to our budding reporter, who writes back often. Will her father find a job? Will he return to Ohio?

What will happen in the treehouse club and who is the boy who turns out to be a girl?

Watch the first American Girl theatrical movie and find out. Even Baltimore has a role to play!

Saturday, September 22, 2018

Book Review: Ginger Pye (children, dog lost and found, 1950s)

 Ginger Pye by Eleanor Estes (Odyssey/Harcourt, 1951, 306 pages, ages 7 and up, grades 2 and up) Ginger Pye is a Newbery Medal book.




Read It All Over Again

I knew about Ginger Pye when I was just a little kid but I never read the book because I thought it was about a girl! Little did I know Ginger Pye is a dog and a boy dog at that!

But it’s never too late to read a good (children’s) book – with or without the child!

All About Kids

Ms. Estes clearly remembers what it’s like being a 9-year-old sister of a 10-year-old boy living in a small town - except for the fact that these two sibs actually get along!

A long book with frequent side-stories that fascinate the reader. Ginger Pye was could have been written by a child who is side-tracked in telling a long story but does it so well, you are mesmerized.

And the story! Earning money and saving up to buy a puppy takes a few chapters, but the puppy of choice, the “Intellectual Dog,” gets his picture in the paper more than once for being so smart and for being. . .  well, that would give away the store. The puppy who disappears for much of the book and how and where and when he is found – all make an unforgettable story for any youngster, or adult, for that matter, even if you first read it decades ago.

And the Characters Are. . . .

Real characters! And the kids even get the measles. (Remember the measles?)

Can you believe Uncle Bennie is only three years old? And who do you think ‘Unsavory’ with the old mustard yellow hat will turn out to be? But Enemy Dog and Dollar Dog will be obvious.

Is it Dated? Does it Matter?

True, Ginger Pye is a story from the 50s and some of the language shows it, as well as some of the mind pictures, but the story of Ginger Pye itself is timeless. You will smile all the way through and not mind the slow building of suspense. You may even guess the ending, due to clever clues in each chapter.

Remember fifteen-cent ice cream sodas? Remember ice-cream sodas even? Remember trolleys because not every family had a car? Remember skeleton houses? Remember how seats on the trolley could turn around so you could talk to the people behind you? Remember marks on back doors to signal to hoboes that if they stopped here, they would be fed? Yup, Ginger Pye is a little dated with illustrations by the author like stick figures so your child can easily imaging they are him/her.

“Mr. Pye thought of himself as a bird man and a father, Mrs. Pye as a mother and a housewife, Jerry as a rock man and a boy, and Rachel as a bird man and a girl.” (p. 168)

 Who is Ginger Pye?

Ginger Pye is a fox terrier (albeit with a docked tail) who is purebred, “’He’s purebred, part fox terrier and part collie.  There may also be a little bull in him, too,’ boasted Jerry.” (Jerry is Ginger’s ‘master.’)

The Nose Knows

DogEvals’ favorite chapter is smack-dab in the middle of the book almost, Chapter 6 of 14, Ginger on the Fire Escape, or ‘How a pup manages to get out of his yard, and follow his kid to school (finding the pencil Jerry dropped along the way), and then learns which room Jerry is in, and find his way there!’

A Newbery Award Winner

Ginger Pye won the Newbery Award so you know it’s entrancing and worth reading. Ms Estes also was awarded Newbery Honors for two
Moffat books
and The Hundred Dresses.



Sunday, August 12, 2018

What did you miss last week? The fabulous Howard County, MD, fair - with dogs


See you next year: August 3-10, 2019

When is the last time you took the kids to a county fair? When is the last time you went to a county fair? When you were a kid?

You missed it again. Sorry. But mark your calendars for next year. West Friendship. Easy to get to – routes 32 and 70. And some days are even free if you qualify but you will want to go almost every day. If you go on a weekday, there are hardly any crowds but the rides at night are the most fun.

See the bunnies and chickens and beef and dairy cattle. Big and small. See the goats and sheep.

This year we saw pig races – and a duck race! Really. Four times a day – noon, 3, 6 and 9 pm.


Real cows and fake cows. Can you tell them apart?


Have you ever pumped water?


And horses. And girls on horses. And hot, tired girls on hot, tired horses.


Learn about the RovingRadish.


And the food and the rides and the fun.
(Some people go to the fair just for the food – fried Oreos. Corn dogs. Lemonade. Cotton candy. Pretzels.)


And the contests – you can enter artwork, cooking and canning, needlework – even a table setting. Or show your sheep or goat or even your dog (join the 4H club, the Happy Hounds – you don’t have to live on a farm)

See you next year!