SYNOPSICS
Doggy Daycare: The Movie (2015) is a English movie. Matty Johnson has directed this movie. Derick Agyemang,Emma Almeida,Damiãn Garth Brown,E.J. Chan are the starring of this movie. It was released in 2015. Doggy Daycare: The Movie (2015) is considered one of the best Family movie in India and around the world.
Michelle and Amelia have been running the D.D.C. since their parents passed away. They have many pets live with them but Mutt remains a street dog. When they run out of finance for the doggy haven and emotions boil they form some risky ideas to save the place. Their attempts to recruit a famous former owner fail so they must think even further outside the box. Mutt leads the pack of unique dogs against all obstacles including an on the edge dog catcher with an obsession for Mutt. The love between the dogs and Michelle keeps them strong when they come up against bullies and horrible people against them. The evil cat Baron ramps up the difficulty anyway he can including hypnotizing and also helping the dog catcher. Amelia sets up a chance for them to be on a show shot at the D.D.C but things go terribly wrong when Michelle's health issues put her life in extreme danger.
More
Doggy Daycare: The Movie (2015) Reviews
A Waste of Film & Resources
I watched this with my 5-year-old because she loves dog movies, but this was so subpar that even she was bored. This movie has everything wrong with it - horrible acting, bad camera angles, ridiculous storyline... I could go on and on. It truly is terrible - don't waste your time with this one.
Unclear Narrative
I rented this for my 2 young boys (aged 7 and 3). But halfway through the film, I stopped it. It was just so bad. Even my kids were not entertained. The filmmakers clearly assumed that by putting lots of cute dogs in the film, kids will enjoy it. But this is not the case. At the bare minimum, there needs to be a clear, easy-to-follow story. This was completely absent from this film. The narrative of the film is extremely unclear due to the following reasons: 1) Most of the film involves dogs "talking" to each other. The problem is, we are not always sure which dog is actually talking. Due to the fact that there are so often multiple dogs in one shot. 2) There are many dogs in the film. Some are very similar looking. 3) The human actors voicing the dogs give similar accents for multiple dogs. All of these add up to make the film very hard to follow - and eventually you just don't care. Often it is hard to distinguish the individual dogs from one another. This is extremely poor filmmaking. I do not recommend this at all.