Mulderig is on the staff of Catholic News Service.Īmusing antics and a lively pace make this follow-up to the 2016 original, helmed by returning director Chris Renaud, an entertaining cartoon for kids. Some material may not be suitable for children. The Motion Picture Association of America rating is PG - parental guidance suggested. The Catholic News Service classification is A-II - adults and adolescents. The film contains cruelty to animals, much cartoonish violence, scenes of peril, a few scatological jokes and a couple of crass terms. Older children and their parents, by contrast, will find it a congenial adventure. Like its predecessor, however, this sequel includes situations of mayhem and danger that could frighten little ones. And the toning down of the potty humor in Brian Lynch’s script, as co-directed by Jonathan Del Val, is another plus. Taking on his first role in an animated film, Ford steals the show with his drolly unflappable macho cowboy of a dog.
Eccentric bunny Snowball (voice of Kevin Hart) and good-hearted Shih Tzu Daisy (voice of Tiffany Haddish), meanwhile, plot to free a gentle tiger from its captivity in an abusive circus.
However, the courageous example set for him by Roster (voice of Harrison Ford), the alpha canine who presides over the ranch and whom the newcomers soon befriend, will prove transformative for Max.īack home in Gotham, Gidget (voice of Jenny Slate), the cheerful Pomeranian who has set her cap for Max, loses the favorite toy he entrusted to her keeping when he left for the country and must brave an apartment full of fearsome felines to retrieve it. When the family decamps to a relative’s farm for a vacation, bringing Max and Duke with them, the unfamiliar rural surroundings only make New York City native Max more fretful. Having acquired a sidekick in the person of shaggy mutt Duke (voice of Eric Stonestreet), a rescue pet he originally resented but with whom he eventually bonded in the kickoff, Max now gains a new friend when his beloved owner has a baby son, Liam.īy the time Liam is ready for preschool, Max has developed anxiety issues in his drive to keep the boy safe. The most prominent of the three plot strands continues the story of affectionate terrier Max (voice of Patton Oswalt). Given that they come amid generally amusing antics that unfold at a lively pace, returning director Chris Renaud’s follow-up to his 2016 original rates as an entertaining cartoon suitable for all but the youngest kids. leading all these players toward a shocking conclusion they never saw coming.NEW YORK (CNS) - Lessons about overcoming fear and helping those in need are featured in “The Secret Life of Pets 2” (Universal).
Good times turn bad and bad turns worse as Johnny finds himself out of his league and with no idea how to fix it. As the days tick by, the options of how to get themselves out of their situation start to disappear. Out in the desert, Johnny and his boys lose sight that the kid is a hostage who can't just be neatly returned. With no parents in sight, they grow used to having the kid around, and Zack enjoys an illicit summer fantasy of drinking, girls and new experiences. When he's double-crossed over missing deal money by raging hothead Jake (Ben Foster), Johnny and his gang impulsively kidnap Jake's little brother, Zack (Anton Yelchin), holding him as a marker and heading to Palm Springs. Where Johnny goes, the party, the girls and his loyal gang follow. Johnny Truelove (Emile Hirsch) controls the drugs on the well-manicured streets of his neighborhood. And in the hot California summer six years ago, something did. When you're living without any consequences, anything can happen. In the sprawling, privileged neighborhoods around L.A., bored teenagers with too much time and too much money string one hazy day into another, looking for the next thrill-doing suburban imitations of the thug life they idolize from rap music, video games and movies.