Ottawa Citizen

PAWS & EFFECTS

Marshall and the rest of the pooch pack hit the big screen for an even bigger adventure

- CHRIS KNIGHT cknight@postmedia.com twitter.com/chrisknigh­tfilm

Paw Patrol is on a roll!

It's been less than a week since the Liberal government announced the country will be facing a fall vote, and already the Canadian-made animated show about a team of search and rescue dogs has released a fulllength movie with an election theme.

Oh sure, you can argue that it's been in the works since at least 2017. But that's just the kind of planning a forward-thinking studio would do. And maybe the producers had a little inside informatio­n? After all, the prime minister did call out several of the pups by name at an event that year.

In any case, Paw Patrol:

The Movie finds the canine sextet — Skye, Chase, Rocky, Marshall, Zuma and Rubble — and their human, er, companion butting heads with Mayor Humdinger, formerly the highest elected official in small-town Foggy Bottom, now in charge of

Adventure City, which has a real New York vibe.

Humdinger, voiced by Ron Pardo, is looking to renew his mandate and has positioned himself as a fiscal conservati­ve, speaking out against libraries, museums and dog parks, while trumpeting the virtues of crowd-pleasing fireworks and the Humdinger Hyper Loop, a dangerous mix of

subway and roller-coaster. He's also an unabashed cat person, which doesn't sit well with the Paw Patrol.

After an opening that resembles one of those truck-dangling stunts you'd expect from the

Fast and Furious franchise, Paw Patrol settles down to a rather tame tale about learning to overcome adversity and defeat bad

guys, preferably by stealing their top hats and/or arranging for them to be caught pants-down in their purple boxers in public.

And sure, I could female-dog about the movie's lapses in logic and chronology — for instance, if Chase (Iain Armitage) is still a puppy, and he also has a traumatic backstory about being abandoned on the streets of Adventure

City, didn't that happen, like, a week ago?

But that would be about as kind as kicking a sleeping dog. So I'll leave it there. Parents, your Paw Patrol-loving offspring will no doubt thrill to seeing their heroes up on the big screen, joined by a scrappy new accomplice (Black-ish's Marsai Martin plays Liberty the dachshund) and grooving to the pop tunes that interrupt the action every 10 minutes or so.

And while the whole thing has a snout-to-tail running time of 88 minutes, a full 11 of those are end credits, with no bonus scenes to watch out for. Fun it may be, but Marvel it ain't.

 ??  ?? Ryder and the gang are ready to save the day in Paw Patrol: The Movie, a full-length animated adventure sure to be a big screen hit with the under six crowd.
Ryder and the gang are ready to save the day in Paw Patrol: The Movie, a full-length animated adventure sure to be a big screen hit with the under six crowd.
 ??  ?? All paws on deck: The Paw Patrol gang is on its way to save the world in a lively film adaptation of the popular Canadian-made show for young children.
All paws on deck: The Paw Patrol gang is on its way to save the world in a lively film adaptation of the popular Canadian-made show for young children.
 ??  ?? Paw Patrol: The Movie has a political theme with Mayor Humdinger in the running. Too bad he's a cat person.
Paw Patrol: The Movie has a political theme with Mayor Humdinger in the running. Too bad he's a cat person.
 ?? PHOTOS: SPIN MASTER ??
PHOTOS: SPIN MASTER

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