Edmonton Journal

Yappy, but sappy

Costner voices dog in tear-jerker

- PAT PADUA

THE ART OF RACING IN THE RAIN ★ ★ ½ out of 5 Cast: Kevin Costner, Milo Ventimigli­a, Amanda Seyfried Director: Simon Curtis Duration: 1 h 49 m

“Sometimes I hate who I am.”

In most movies, an expression of such existentia­l angst is to be expected from the lips of a troubled teen — or a conflicted killer. But in the overheated

(yet undercooke­d) melodrama The Art of Racing in the Rain, those thoughts belong to a dog, voiced by Kevin Costner, who articulate­s the frustratio­n that his character can’t communicat­e with the struggling race car driver (Milo Ventimigli­a) who owns him.

In this sappy flick, director Simon Curtis lays on the drama, but in gearing it to dog lovers, he misses out on all kinds of sports-movie beats that might have made it a more invigorati­ng race.

We first meet aging golden retriever Enzo (named after racer and sports-car creator Enzo Ferrari) when he’s sick and lying, as he puts it, “in a puddle of my own making.” This will immediatel­y tug at the heartstrin­gs of anyone who worries about their furry familiars falling ill. (Guilty as charged.) But Costner’s deadly serious line reading makes it almost laughable.

The rest of the movie proceeds as a series of canine flashbacks, beginning with the puppy farm where Enzo was picked out and including the racetrack where his owner, Denny, skilfully manoeuvres his vehicle on a wet track (hence the film’s title). Through all Denny’s triumphs and struggles, Enzo is by his side: falling in love; marriage (to Eve, played by Amanda Seyfried); the arrival of a baby; a crippling illness; and a bitter family dispute.

It’s standard fare for humans — at least in soap operas — but for Enzo, the ups and down are just as fraught as the stuffed zebra toy that, in his dog’s mind, poses a cagey and malevolent threat.

The best thing about Racing is Enzo’s stream-of-consciousn­ess narration, which puts his canine joys and anxieties into words with humour and pathos (scripted by Mark Bomback, adapting Garth Stein’s 2008 novel). But while Ventimigli­a and Seyfried are appealing actors, the story’s human element just isn’t that interestin­g.

The banal, inoffensiv­e pop soundtrack — which includes George Harrison’s Give Me

Love and Creedence Clearwater Revival’s on-the-nose Have You Ever Seen the Rain? — doesn’t help.

Despite its mild charms, Racing feels like another nail in the coffin of Costner’s career. The Hollywood veteran, who won directing and best-picture Oscars for 1990’s Dances With Wolves — along with a best actor nomination — has been in slow decline ever since.

Now he is in talking-animal purgatory.

The actor, for his part, gives Enzo all he’s got, but it may be too much. It’s hard not to wince a little when Costner delivers a line like “Somewhere the zebra was dancing.” Not because it isn’t funny, but because Costner reads it like it holds the key to understand­ing all existence.

And maybe, for a dog, it does. But by emphasizin­g the animal story (and its inherent emotional heft) over the — forgive me — underdog sports drama, Racing misses an opportunit­y. Denny is a race car driver, and the film repeatedly drops the name of the late Brazilian driver Ayrton Senna. But the film’s big races, for the most part, take place off screen.

The movie has its flaws. Still, for anyone with a soft spot for the mute gaze of man’s best friend, it’s hard not to shed a tear — or two — during The Art of Racing in the Rain.

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