The Chronicle

WOOF DIAMONDS

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BEAUTY is in the eye of the beholder, but sometimes it’s just very difficult to see.

In this gently mocking documentar­y, actress and animal lover Caroline Quentin goes off in search of the most unsightly animals. She wants to challenge her prejudices and find “the beauty in the beast”, but also find a British contender for the imminent World’s Ugliest Dog Contest in California.

Caroline, who has five dogs, six cats, seven chickens and occasional­ly keeps pigs, sheep and turkeys, thinks all of her animals are absolutely beautiful.

And as she meets these aesthetica­lly-challenged pets, she is occasional­ly repulsed.

But rallying as best she can, she meets everything from a hairless guinea pig (a ‘skinny pig’) with scary red eyes, to a hairless rat, a giant squelchy snail and a hairy tarantula named Peaches. And no, the cute name doesn’t make it any more appealing.

There’s Mugly (World’s Ugliest Dog 2012), who has an impressive wardrobe to rival that of any human, and some hairless Sphinx cats – yes, you can see every bone in their bodies.

And owner Ashley has to promise Caroline at least three times that her pet rat won’t scamper onto her. “Do you love her?” Caroline asks, incredulou­s and backing away.

But it’s Chinese Crested dog Chase who wins Caroline’s heart to head with her to the US.

Chase, rescued from a puppy farm, is hairless, toothless, has a permanentl­y lolling tongue and a cataract. Can he steal the crown?

It all gets surprising­ly emotional...

 ??  ?? Chase, who was rescued from a puppy farm Caroline Quentin with Martha, the winner of the World’s Ugliest Dog Contest 2017
Chase, who was rescued from a puppy farm Caroline Quentin with Martha, the winner of the World’s Ugliest Dog Contest 2017

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