Dog Review — Dog (2022) Film Review, a movie directed by Reid Carolin and Channing Tatum and starring Channing Tatum, Q’orianka Kilcher, Aqueela Zoll, Kevin Nash, Jane Adams, Emmy Raver-Lampman, Cayden Boyd, Darren Kellan, Neralda Bega, Nicole Laliberte, Ronnie Gene Blevins, Skyler Joy, Amanda Booth, Ryder McLaughlin, JoAnne McGrath, Patricia Isaac, Eric Urbiztondo and [...]
Continue reading: Film Review: Dog (2022): Channing Tatum Stars In & Co-Directs a Heartwarming Tale of Companionship...
Continue reading: Film Review: Dog (2022): Channing Tatum Stars In & Co-Directs a Heartwarming Tale of Companionship...
- 2/22/2022
- by Thomas Duffy
- Film-Book
Everyone loves a good dog movie, and if you add Channing Tatum, it’s a must watch. In “Dog,” the actor takes his skill set to a new kind of story, the bond developed between a man and his dog, based on his own experience with his late dog Lulu.
First thing’s first: No, the dog does not die in the “Dog” movie. And second, here’s where and how you can watch the new film.
When Does “Dog” Come Out?
“Dog” premieres on Feb. 18.
Is “Dog” Streaming Anywhere?
“Dog” is not currently available for streaming and streaming plans haven’t yet been announced. Right now, the only way to see the film is in theaters. Check your local listings.
Who Is in the “Dog” Cast?
Channing Tatum plays Briggs, a former army ranger who agrees to take Lulu (a Belgian Malinois) who also worked in the army, down...
First thing’s first: No, the dog does not die in the “Dog” movie. And second, here’s where and how you can watch the new film.
When Does “Dog” Come Out?
“Dog” premieres on Feb. 18.
Is “Dog” Streaming Anywhere?
“Dog” is not currently available for streaming and streaming plans haven’t yet been announced. Right now, the only way to see the film is in theaters. Check your local listings.
Who Is in the “Dog” Cast?
Channing Tatum plays Briggs, a former army ranger who agrees to take Lulu (a Belgian Malinois) who also worked in the army, down...
- 2/18/2022
- by Dessi Gomez
- The Wrap
The camera loves Channing Tatum, and that makes up for a lot in “Dog,” a corny road movie that mostly panders to fans of Tatum and/or dogs, as well as any moviegoer who still thinks that making a big show of supporting the troops (any troops) makes them more human than, uh, most everyone else.
Tatum plays Army Ranger Jackson Briggs, a selfish but irrepressible grunt who travels along the Pacific coast (from Washington to Arizona) with Lulu, an aggressive but misunderstood Army dog who’s scheduled to be put down after she makes a guest appearance at her dead handler’s funeral.
Briggs’ needlessly defensive everyman personality holds “Dog” back from being as good as its high-concept premise. Thankfully, Tatum, who co-directed the movie with screenwriter and producer Reid Carolin (“Magic Mike Xxl”), mostly gets by on-screen charisma alone, since he and his collaborators give his character ample...
Tatum plays Army Ranger Jackson Briggs, a selfish but irrepressible grunt who travels along the Pacific coast (from Washington to Arizona) with Lulu, an aggressive but misunderstood Army dog who’s scheduled to be put down after she makes a guest appearance at her dead handler’s funeral.
Briggs’ needlessly defensive everyman personality holds “Dog” back from being as good as its high-concept premise. Thankfully, Tatum, who co-directed the movie with screenwriter and producer Reid Carolin (“Magic Mike Xxl”), mostly gets by on-screen charisma alone, since he and his collaborators give his character ample...
- 2/17/2022
- by Simon Abrams
- The Wrap
“Animals are people too!” a liberal yahoo in Portland yells before nearly getting his face eaten off by a Belgian Malinois named Lulu in “Dog,” a movie that not-so-secretly agrees with that sentiment, even as it has a laugh at the clueless animal lover’s expense.
Lulu, it turns out, is a more complicated character than the one her human co-star, Channing Tatum, gets to play — which explains why it took three Malinoises to embody her on screen: one to do most of the “acting” (Britta), one to lie down (Lana) and one to look as incorrigibly homicidal as possible, like she could rip out your throat or murder Al-Qaida, if necessary (that would be Zuza). But Tatum had the much tougher job, trying to disappear into the skin of a battle-scarred ex-U.S. Army Ranger tasked with transporting Lulu across the Western United States while co-directing the project (with...
Lulu, it turns out, is a more complicated character than the one her human co-star, Channing Tatum, gets to play — which explains why it took three Malinoises to embody her on screen: one to do most of the “acting” (Britta), one to lie down (Lana) and one to look as incorrigibly homicidal as possible, like she could rip out your throat or murder Al-Qaida, if necessary (that would be Zuza). But Tatum had the much tougher job, trying to disappear into the skin of a battle-scarred ex-U.S. Army Ranger tasked with transporting Lulu across the Western United States while co-directing the project (with...
- 2/17/2022
- by Peter Debruge
- Variety Film + TV
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