DVD - Pan & Scan Learn more
| More Formats | |
|---|---|
| DVD - Full Frame | $14.99 |
Disc #1 -- Good Boy!
1. Main Titles [2:03]
2. The Dog Has Landed [1:30]
3. Adoption Day! [1:42]
4. Dog Boy on the Job [2:15]
5. A Strange Day [1:18]
6. Little Prisoner [1:58]
7. Training Day [2:10]
8. Doggie's Dark Secret [3:28]
9. Owen's Better Hearing [2:29]
10. Mission From the Dog Star [2:55]
11. Looking Crazy [2:14]
12. Man's Best...What? [3:02]
13. Lazy, Greedy Pets! [2:54]
14. A Temporary Mission [2:35]
15. Dignity 101 [3:48]
16. Playing Ball [4:20]
17. A Bad Influence [:47]
18. "Greater Dane Arriving" [:09]
19. Pagentry and La-Di-Da [3:47]
20. A Formal Dinner [2:12]
21. The Mind Fence [1:39]
22. Open-House Day [2:21]
23. A Close Shave [1:51]
24. Her Royal Heinie [1:11]
25. "Love!?" [3:12]
26. Sad Dogs [2:13]
27. All Gone [3:29]
28. "You're a Good Boy" [3:05]
29. 3942's Loyalty [3:58]
30. Time to Go [1:59]
31. Return From Sirius [1:19]
32. End Credits [2:17]
The sweet and friendly Good Boy! is positively canine in its eagerness to please. As with Cats and Dogs, the premise is irresistible: Dogs, it is revealed, are superior beings from another planet sent here long ago to colonize Earth. Over the years, however, they became pets instead of masters, and Canid 3942 (voiced by Matthew Broderick) has been dispatched by the Greater Dane to determine whether dogs should stay or be recalled to the home planet. Canid, more adorable than E.T. and way more civilized than Stitch, finds his mission complicated when, after crash-landing his spaceship, he is befriended by Owen (Liam Aiken), your requisite lonely misfit, who operates a dog-walking service. He names the dog Hubble and is stunned to discover his new super-intelligent pet's extraterrestrial origins. Hubble is horrified at how dogs have become domesticated, and he must retrain the neighborhood pooches (voiced with loads of personality by, most prominently, Carl Reiner, Delta Burke, and Brittany Murphy) before the Greater Dane arrives to fetch them home. Good Boy! may not be best-in-show, but dog lovers of all ages will lap this up, particularly the predictably heartwarming conclusion when Hubble learns to stop worrying and love to fetch. Donald Liebenson, Barnes & Noble
More reviews and recommendations