DIRECTOR: Chris Renaud and Yarrow Cheney LEAD CAST: Louis C.K., Eric Stonestreet, Kevin Hart,
Jenny Slate, Ellie Kemper SCREENWRITER:
Bryan Lynch, Cinco Paul & Ken Daurio
PRODUCER: Chris Meledandri and Janet Healey EDITOR: Ken Schretzmann MUSICAL DIRECTOR: Alexandre Desplat GENRE: Comedy/Animation DISTRIBUTOR: Universal Pictures LOCATION: United States RUNNING TIME: 90 minutes
Technical assessment:
3
Moral assessment:
3
CINEMA rating:
PG 13
The
only regret of Max (voiced by Louis C. K.), a pampered Terrier of New York City
career girl Katie (voiced by Elli Kemper), is that Katie’s work keeps her away
too long from him. Left alone in the apartment,
Max fills his day by associating with the neighbors’ pets, including the fluffy
Pomeranian next door who has a secret crush on him—Gidget (voiced by Jenny
Slate). When their owners are away,
these animals amuse themselves in ways known only to them. Max’s happy-go-lucky days come to an end when
Katie brings home from the dog pound the huge and shaggy Duke (voiced by Eric
Stonestreet). Rebuffed by Max, Dukes
stops trying to be friendly; soon their rivalry lead them to one comic
misadventure after another as they encounter all sorts of mean, wild, and
abandoned animals coming out from their hideaways in the city.
The secret life of pets can’t help but remind movie-goers of the delightful Toy Story (1995), which is about what
toys do in the absence of their human owners.
The CGI rendering of the New York skyline and landscape—magically colorful
by day and aglow with otherworldly lights at night—combined with the almost
human characterization of the animals redeem the sketchy and somewhat inconsequential plot. In an effort to make the movie live up to its
title and please its target audience, directors Renaud and Chenney focus on the
clandestine, supposedly exciting exploits of the animals. Much of the movie shows the pets running away
from the clutches of the city’s undomesticated animals while dodging the nets
of the pound officers, turning the movie into a protracted chase scene.
While the movie may visually appeal to younger audiences,
there are precious messages for adult humans issuing from the mouths of the
non-human characters. For one, it subtly
reminds parents how to sensitively deal with an only child when bringing home a
new sibling. It also ought to teach
parents to be more present to their children—if pets can become lonely and get
into trouble due to separation from their owners, how much more the children left
alone at home while parents are out working?
The cooperation among the animals rescuing their missing friends also
demonstrates what good teamwork can do. While The
Secret Life of Pets tells a comforting story, parents should not forget
that there is such a thing as cartoon violence.
On the day CINEMA watched the movie, a very small child cried
inconsolably when a snake opened its mouth to strike a small animal, revealing
life-threatening fangs. She cried so
much and so loudly that her father had to take her out of the theater to calm
her down, only to be terrified again when another helpless pet’s life was
endangered in the chase.