The scruffy mongrel Duke (Eric Stonestreet) is hoping to make a new friend, but Max wants him out – and in a bid to freeze Duke out during a walk, the pair find themselves far away from home, without their collars, and on the run from the callous animal rescue employees. ![]() Until one fateful afternoon, when she returns home with the worst gift imaginable a new dog. Taking place in a Manhattan apartment building, we meet Max (Louis C.K.) devoted to his owner, to an extent where he sits by the door, every day, all day, awaiting her arrival. Inevitable, but frustrating all the same. What transpires is an adventure that spans the streets of New York City. Making for a brilliant concept for an animated endeavour, in order to enlarge this idea cinematically, there’s an obligation of sorts to implement action and drama into the narrative, particularly to appease the younger members of the audience – and as such we deviate carelessly away from the endearing sense of simplicity that lays the foundations for this production to thrive off. ![]() ![]() What do our pets do when we’re out at work? A question many of us have asked ourselves, and often, we see the evidence on the kitchen floor when we get home.
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