The Oklahoman

‘DOG DAYS’

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PG 1:58

A galumphing comedy offered as a balm for the late summer doldrums, “Dog Days” crossbreed­s romantic cliches with cute canines and inspired bits of offbeat humor. As a mutt, it possesses a certain scruffy charm, as long as you’re in the mood to forgive its lapses.

Although structured by screenwrit­ers Elissa Matsueda and Erica Oyama like the now-classic Rom-com anthology “Love Actually,” “Dog Days” lacks the polish and originalit­y of that 2003 film, failing to dodge — or at least reinvent — the tired tropes, or to link all its disparate characters gracefully.

Despite that, director Ken Marino (who is married to Oyama) manages to find the funny and the weird within the movie’s cliches. If “Dog Days” is better than it deserves to be, it may be because of the filmmaker’s comedic chops, both behind and in front of the camera. (Marino has directed episodes of “Children’s Hospital,” and has a recurring role in “Fresh Off the Boat.”)

Plus, he has a cast of performers who are blessed with true comic pedigrees: spot-on timing and the ability to improvise.

Together they wrangle “Dog Days” into reasonable shape, linking subplots about a dozen or so people and their dogs. Although set in Los Angeles, there are corners of it that feel cozy and neighborho­od-y.

One character, a coffeeshop barista played by Vanessa Hudgens, pines for a handsome veterinari­an (Michael Cassidy). She finds a stray Chihuahua and brings it to him for a checkup, and then takes it to a shy dog-rescue guy (Jon Bass). Other characters include: a local TV host (Nina Dobrev) who has fallen for her on-air partner (Tone Bell); a feckless rock musician (Adam Pally); a lonely widower (Ron Cephas Jones); and two married couples. One of those couples (Jessica St. Clair and Thomas Lennon) is expecting twins; another has just adopted a little girl (Elizabeth Phoenix Caro). All of these people have something to do with dogs.

That’s a lot of threads, and “Dog Days” doesn’t deftly handle them.

And yet it entertains, thanks to the eccentric humor that Marino and his actors — including the fourlegged ones — weave in. The dogs never seem to be gazing off at their trainers, but remain fully engaged in their interactio­ns with humans. (Editor Brian Scofield may deserve some of the credit for that.)

What could otherwise have been corny, predictabl­e, cobbled together becomes something of a treat, as Bass desperatel­y flirts with Hudgens, Pally wrestles with a labradoodl­e, and Jones wrings the cliches out of his grumpy archetype. Tig Notaro is also fun, playing a deadpan doggy psychiatri­st who charges $300 per hour to offer only the most obvious advice.

Hey, it’s August. It keeps raining. What’s the harm in a little drollery and drool?

Starring: Nina Dobrev, Vanessa Hudgens, Adam Pally, Eva Longoria (Contains occasional­ly rude humor, some coarse language and a subtle reference to marijuana.)

— Jane Horwitz, Special to The Washington Post

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