‘A Dog’s Way Home’: Sugary treats fuel a canine cutie’s 400-mile road trip

SHARE ‘A Dog’s Way Home’: Sugary treats fuel a canine cutie’s 400-mile road trip
film_review___a_dog_s_way_home_81032458_e1547164522132.jpg

Jonah Hauer-King plays a VA worker who takes in the stray dog Shelby in “A Dog’s Way Home.” | Columbia Pictures

How much of a sweet tooth do you have when it comes to movies? It’s a question you might want to consider before stepping out for “A Dog’s Way Home,” W. Bruce Cameron adaptation of his book about a dog who finds her way back to her owner across 400 miles of Colorado terrain, because this is one sugary concoction.

Not that it’s ineffective — I dare even non-dog-lovers not to get a little misty-eyed at the inevitable conclusion — it’s just very, very, VERY earnest, like a PBS Kids morning show meets a cute puppy pics slideshow with much higher production value.

Bryce Dallas Howard provides the honeyed voice for the heroine, Bella, a stray who lives happily with some dogs and cats under an abandoned property until animal services snags about half (including her mom). She soon gets adopted by a kind college-aged kid across the street, Lucas (Jonah Hauer-King), who works at the VA and lives with his mom, a war vet who has depression, played by Ashley Judd.

Bella is a very cute pup who grows into a very cute dog with limited grammar and comprehension skills that never quite evolve past that of a 4-year-old (i.e. “I’m ready to do ‘go home!”’). She also happens to be enemy No. 1 of the city of Denver after she falls on the wrong side of a ban on breeds designated as pit bulls.

“I know, it’s stupid,” explains an employee at the animal shelter admirably succinctly. Another character, Olivia, played by Alexandra Shipp of “Love, Simon,” describes it as, “basically racism.” This movie really has it in for Denver’s Ordinance Sec. 8-55.

Once the authorities get word of Bella, and impound her at once, her cozy existence with Lucas and his mom comes to an end and she goes to live, for a time, with some relatives of Olivia’s who live in New Mexico. But the dutiful and deeply nostalgic Bella decides to take things into her own hands and find her way back to Denver and Lucas.

Directed by Charles Martin Smith, of such animal adventures as “Dolphin Tale” and “Air Bud,” ”A Dog’s Way Home” is actually surprisingly intense. Bella goes dumpster-diving one day with a pack of mangy dogs she comes across, she witnesses poachers killing a cougar, befriends a CGI baby cougar, steals food from quite a few people and establishments, survives an avalanche, crosses a freeway and even lives alongside a homeless man for a while. She is laser-focused on getting back to Lucas, however, and even the good situations she comes across (like living in the very stylish and expensive home of a couple who take her in) aren’t enough.

Although it might be a stretch to categorize this as a movie, “A Dog’s Way Home” is harmless enough and a nice little adventure that’s fit for the whole family. But you might want to have the tissues ready.

‘A Dog’s Way Home’

★★1⁄2

Columbia Pictures presents a film directed by Charles Martin Smith and written by W. Bruce Cameron and Cathryn Michon, based on Cameron’s novel. Rated PG (for thematic elements, some peril and language). Running time: 96 minutes. Now showing at local theaters.

The Latest
Wind and solar are supposed to replace coal plants that are closing, but that didn’t happen in 2023. Another fossil fuel, natural gas, filled the void.
Hours after Williams said he asked the Bears for reasons why the team had a well-worn history of quarterback struggles, GM Ryan Poles said that “we’ve got to stop going back all the time.”
The men, 18 and 20, were in the 1800 block of West Monroe Street about 9:20 p.m. when two people got out of a light-colored sedan and fired shots. They were hospitalized in fair condition.
NFL
Here’s where all the year’s top rookies are heading for the upcoming NFL season.