• IANS
    IANS
    Sify

    6

    Overall, despite a stretched narrative of 130 minutes, Isle of Dogs is a thought-provoking film that is worth a watch.

  • Wes Anderson packs this magnificent, complex tale with intoxicating imagery…

  • The animation is smooth, the characters are quite vivid and most of the dialogue are lightly comedic. The familiar voice cast helps keep the attachment going…

  • Rucha Sharma
    Rucha Sharma
    DNA India

    8

    One can interpret the movie to be about deportation, political scapegoating, and what have you. But in the end, it’s a story about dogs loving their masters and Wes Anderson delivers a beautiful spectacle.

  • Namrata Joshi
    Namrata Joshi
    The Hindu

    -

    Like Anderson’s 2007 film, The Darjeeling Limited, which set in India, Isle of Dogs has also been accused of cultural appropriation. Beyond the ‘white saviour’ trope of an American exchange student saving the day, one wonders if there’s more to Anderson’s decision of keeping Japanese uninterpreted. There is so much to be read in the film that Anderson’s claim of it originating simply as the story of dogs in a trash island seems like a distant, unimaginable past.

  • Deccan Chronicle Team
    Deccan Chronicle Team
    Deccan Chronicle

    8

    ‘Isle of Dogs’ is fast paced, colourful, and an absolute delight all around. And Anderson once again demonstrates that he is among cinema’s all time greats. 

  • Shalini Langer
    Shalini Langer
    Indian Express

    5

    Isle of Dogs is disappointing, in the stereotypes it wields, in the history it seems not to care for, in the clever jokes it can’t resist succumbing to, and ultimately in its treatment of the four-legged species it seems devoted to.

  • Rohan Naahar
    Rohan Naahar
    Hindustan Times

    6

    Director Wes Anderson’s latest, despite featuring a talented voice cast that includes Bryan Cranston, Edward Norton and others doesn’t have his usual bite.

  • Rahul Desai
    Rahul Desai
    Film Companion

    8

    Because the invisible thread of kinship connecting a child to a dog is the same one that connects this filmmaker’s vision to our perception of controlled imagery. It is, in essence, a language private and beyond reason. Clearly, for Wes Anderson, all the world’s a postman, and its men and women merely dogs.

  • Neil Soans
    Neil Soans
    Times Of India

    8

    Especially at a time when CGI-heavy visual effects bombard us, it’s indeed heartening to experience an old-school animation film like this. It’s one of the movies that should be experienced on the big screen to truly appreciate all the intricate details that have gone into creating it step-by-step. But it’s also a movie that you’d want to own just to admire its beauty as every screenshot is a work of art worth hanging on your wall.

  • If the film sometimes bites off more than it can chew, getting too clever for its own good, then perhaps you’ll be forgiving – after all it’s got its heart is in the right place.