Irish Daily Mail

TOOTHLESS TALKING DOG AND A BLOODLESS VAMPIRE

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BY THE time that Show Dogs yaps to a conclusion, you might find the charm of a crime caper involving talking animals has not just worn off, but has been entirely extinguish­ed. It’s not a long film but, even at 90 minutes, it outstays its welcome.

It starts promisingl­y, however, as Max, a handsome New York cop who also happens to be a Rottweiler, investigat­es a plot to smuggle valuable animals.

Reluctantl­y, he teams up with human FBI

agent (Will Arnett) on the trail of the criminal mastermind­s behind the dastardly scheme which leads our two sleuths to a dog show in Las Vegas. The voice cast includes Stanley Tucci

(enjoying himself as a French Papillon called Philippe), Alan Cumming (a Yorkshire Terrier) and the famous US former basketball player Shaquille O’Neal (a Hungarian Komondor).

They can’t be faulted, and nor can the wizardry that skilfully combines computerge­nerated imagery with live action.

But the narrative starts looking tired long before the concluding showdown in an aircraft hangar — just not as tired and desperate as the over-tens in the audience.

O AS FOR the under-tens, Show Dogs is a marginally better option than THE LITTLE

VAMPIRE, an animated remake of the liveaction comedy-horror film from 2000 that might actually suck the life out of you.

Again, there’s a decent voice cast, which includes Jim Carter, Miriam Margolyes and the late Tim Pigott-Smith. But a convoluted story about a 13-year-old American boy who befriends a vampire will fly over the heads of the target audience and bore grown-ups.

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