Pleasantly Diminishing Sequel: Our Review of ‘The Secret Life of Pets 2’ on 4K

Posted in Blu-Ray/DVD, Movies by - August 29, 2019
Pleasantly Diminishing Sequel: Our Review of ‘The Secret Life of Pets 2’ on 4K

Sequels don’t ALWAYS set the world on fire…

As Illumination Entertainment hopes to cash in on the success of the first installment of this franchise, with The Secret Life of Pets 2 they boil it all down even simpler and focus on their key demographics almost to a fault.

The Secret Life of Pets 2 is the continuing story of Max (Patton Oswalt) and his pet friends following the secret lives that they live after their owners leave them for either work or school every day.

While there’s nothing wrong with The Secret Life of Pets 2 it steers away from some of the comedic sensibilities that made the first film a little more universally accepted and goes straight for the 3-7 year old demographic which makes for a film filled with some overt messages and highly entertaining set pieces, leaving character development and motivation more in the rear view mirror.

Director Chris Renaud is a veteran hand in the world of animation and along with his co-director Jonathan del Val they certainly develop a good looking movie.  However, with that being said the script needed work as this all felt very episodic in nature.

Writer Brian Lynch tackled this sequel by himself and while there’s nothing wrong with that the entire film felt like an exercise to get us from set piece to set piece.  Sure the slapstick comedy is fun and everyone buys into the material which will make the film an enjoyable exercise for the kids (and a problematic one for the adults paying admission) but it all feels like it is aiming for the middle.  Other films in the Illumination canon while also skewing young did enough to make the older crowds feel a little more engaged with the story telling, this on the other hand is just clunky life lessons and slap stick action comedy.

The voice work is solid as you’d expect with Patton Oswalt taking over for the voice of Max for reasons we obviously don’t have to rehash here.  And the rest of the ensemble returns with Kevin Hart doing a lot of the heavy lifting on this one, but the likes of Tiffany Haddish, Nick Kroll and the indomitable Harrison Ford add some nice flavour to it all as well.

The animation looks amazing in 4K and the extras on the Blu-Ray include the 2 Illumination Mini-Movies, the subsequent making of the Mini-Movies, Deleted Scenes, a Making of the feature, character pods, instructions for flip books, behind the scenes looks at how to draw characters and more in-depth moments will all the characters and some music videos.

We can’t deny that The Secret Life of Pets 2 is big bright colourful and fun, but with an obvious lack of story or character development it’s only asking us to laugh at the jokes and the funny situations.  There’s nothing wrong with that, but it’s nice to get a little bit more.

 

  • Release Date: 8/27/2019
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David Voigt is a Toronto based writer with a problem and a passion for the moving image and all things cinema. Having moved from production to the critical side of the aisle for well over 15 years now at outlets like Examiner.com, Criticize This, Dork Shelf (Now That Shelf), and to.Night Newspaper. He’s been all across the continent; serving on the FIPRESCI Jury at the Festival Du Nouveau Cinema in Montreal, covering festivals out side of Toronto like Calgary Underground Film Festival, CUFF Docs, Slamdance, Fantasia, SXSW, DOC NYC, Santa Barbara Film Festival, New York Asian Film Festival and many others However, In the uncertain world of modern film journalism, David also knew that he needed to have a hand in writing and cementing his own contributions on the global film scene. Having eclipsed the 10 year anniversary of his own outlet, In The Seats, where he’s been striving to support film (and TV) from all walks of life and his podcast “In The Seats With…” where after 5 & ½ years and over 750 episodes he’s talked with a wide variety of filmmakers, actors, behind the scenes artisans and so much more on the art of storytelling for the screen, which is spawning the launch of a new show in the Spring of 2026. “ITS: Soundtracks” will focus on the use of soundtrack and score in film which he believes is a combination that is the cinematic equivalent of Peanut Butter and Chocolate. All this as well as hosting and moderating a variety of big screen events around the city, covering film in all its forms is just a way of life for him.
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