AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
5,0/10
1,6 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaSchoolbooks say that Belka and Strelka were first space dogs. But the dogs say that people dissemble a lot.Schoolbooks say that Belka and Strelka were first space dogs. But the dogs say that people dissemble a lot.Schoolbooks say that Belka and Strelka were first space dogs. But the dogs say that people dissemble a lot.
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Artistas
- Prêmios
- 1 vitória no total
Anna Bolshova
- Belka
- (narração)
Elena Yakovleva
- Strelka
- (narração)
Evgeniy Mironov
- Venya
- (narração)
Sergey Garmash
- Kazbek
- (narração)
Aleksandr Bashirov
- Mops
- (narração)
Vladimir Dovzhik
- Parrot
- (narração)
- …
Ruslan Kuleshov
- Pushok
- (narração)
Roman Kavashnin
- piggy Vova
- (narração)
Kirill Sergeev
- Flea 1
- (narração)
Boris Smelyanets
- Flea 2
- (narração)
Grigoriy Vats
- Kennedy
- (narração)
Anastasiya Ushakova
- Karolin
- (narração)
Sergey Yushkevich
- Cat Psychiatrist
- (narração)
Nina Shmelkova
- Bulldog
- (narração)
- …
Nikolay Smorchkov
- Professor
- (narração)
Aleksandr Zakharov
- Speaker
- (narração)
Sergey Burunov
- Sheepdogs
- (narração)
Sergei Busarov
- Lion
- (narração)
- …
Avaliações em destaque
Russian animated film from 2010. The dog Belka thrown out on the streets of Moscow when the rocket on her circus stops working in the midst of a performance. She hits the street-smart Strelkas and rat Lyonya and the new trio soon forced to flee from the scary Bulldog. The film is based on the Soviet space dogs and honors the first animals who survived an orbital space trip. Space Dogs give children a insight of how the exploration of space began. The vast array of lovable characters and quality computer-animated. During the end credits, real-life archive footage from the Soviet Space Program and Space Dogs is shown. Highly recommend this movie for all ages especially for children.
I would never recommend this movie to anyone age groups. It's long, boring and incoherent. It contains some abstract goals and dreams, and different environments that expose the cute little dogs for a little of everything. And have a very strange start. The film could not produce smiles or laughs. The only good thing was the dogs' relationship to each other. Bad for children and for adults. If one were to make a movie about space dogs, then it should rather be on the dog's wild adventures in space that could pique the imagination a bit. Instead they had to run around on the ground. It was as if they were trying to get everything in the movie, surroundings, environment, emotions, relationships, development, 3d, society and space. The result was a too superficial movie.
Suitable for kids? I guess so. But the movie is pretty unconventional.
It tries to capture and deliver the long-forgotten atmosphere of soviet childhood with many of its supporting characters based on nearly iconic characters of old Soviet cartoons and children's stories. The setting - Moscow of the 60-s. This contributes to the overall spirit of nostalgia, It's like if the authors take their old toys from an attic and start telling their stories.
The story is little sad, and the characters always have to keep struggling, while their fate doesn't even belong to them. This spirit is probably created intentionally to make the viewers experience what it was like to be a Soviet man. There's nothing propagandistic about this film, and, as I said, It feels very authentic.
The original Russian voice acting plays an important role in delivering the spirit, which is often even more important than animation itself. I do suspect the dubbing doesn't contribute to correct perception of this piece.
Overall, this is not exactly similar to Pixar movies and it's not about a positive message, fun or enthusiasm. But it enables viewers to experience, like, an ancient civilization that no longer exists.
What it reminds me is "LES TRIPLETTES DE BELLEVILLE". However, "Space Dogs" does seem to be acceptable for little kids and has some humanistic messages to deliver. Only that it's not about walking around and making the world a better place. It's more about facing things that are not in one's power to change at all.
That said, the pace is quick and action-packed, so it's hard to get bored. Overall, a good first step towards Pixar standards.
The quality of CG is not exactly up to modern standards, but it's advantage is about delivering the spirit of Soviet puppet-animated films. So I say it's good, as I doubt anyone else could do it.
So, why is this worth watching for a non-Russian-speaker? I guess it's like anime - another world, another life philosophy. It's also educational.
It's not very good for those who: a) expect a charge of purely positive energy and uplifting messages b) have a particularly strong bias against USSR
It tries to capture and deliver the long-forgotten atmosphere of soviet childhood with many of its supporting characters based on nearly iconic characters of old Soviet cartoons and children's stories. The setting - Moscow of the 60-s. This contributes to the overall spirit of nostalgia, It's like if the authors take their old toys from an attic and start telling their stories.
The story is little sad, and the characters always have to keep struggling, while their fate doesn't even belong to them. This spirit is probably created intentionally to make the viewers experience what it was like to be a Soviet man. There's nothing propagandistic about this film, and, as I said, It feels very authentic.
The original Russian voice acting plays an important role in delivering the spirit, which is often even more important than animation itself. I do suspect the dubbing doesn't contribute to correct perception of this piece.
Overall, this is not exactly similar to Pixar movies and it's not about a positive message, fun or enthusiasm. But it enables viewers to experience, like, an ancient civilization that no longer exists.
What it reminds me is "LES TRIPLETTES DE BELLEVILLE". However, "Space Dogs" does seem to be acceptable for little kids and has some humanistic messages to deliver. Only that it's not about walking around and making the world a better place. It's more about facing things that are not in one's power to change at all.
That said, the pace is quick and action-packed, so it's hard to get bored. Overall, a good first step towards Pixar standards.
The quality of CG is not exactly up to modern standards, but it's advantage is about delivering the spirit of Soviet puppet-animated films. So I say it's good, as I doubt anyone else could do it.
So, why is this worth watching for a non-Russian-speaker? I guess it's like anime - another world, another life philosophy. It's also educational.
It's not very good for those who: a) expect a charge of purely positive energy and uplifting messages b) have a particularly strong bias against USSR
This movie seams exceedingly cheap. The animation is crude, the movements seem like something out of a stop motion movie, and the 3D effects are so crude, that it will give you a headache at times. But that isn't even the worst of it. This movie is, from start to finish, nothing more than a horrible and misguided glorification of the Russia that used to be. Everywhere you look you see happy faces alongside communist symbols. For this reason alone, this movie will never be recommended by me. This type of political propaganda has absolutely no place in a movie made for children. I was honestly left with a very bad taste in my mouth. I found the whole thins more than distasteful.
The animated movie voluntarily provides a direct reflection towards the soviet style, and to honor the dogs which were first sent unto the space in around the 1960s.
The animation is unvivid, it does have some glitches however, it is still bearable to watch.
The story struggles at first and I only enjoyed the last few possible minutes more because that is precisely where the innocent fun naturally began and the movie gained its cheerful soul.
The dialogues are sometimes humorous and clumsy at the same time, and I do appreciate the voice-over though it isn't the best but they did give out their best.
It should not be compared to Pixar's or any big production house, though, it is mediocre at its best.
The kids can discover a bit about the Ancient Soviet times and Sputnik space program.
The movie points out positive message like friendship, family and loyalty.
With family it is ostensibly a popcorn worthy one-time watch.
The animation is unvivid, it does have some glitches however, it is still bearable to watch.
The story struggles at first and I only enjoyed the last few possible minutes more because that is precisely where the innocent fun naturally began and the movie gained its cheerful soul.
The dialogues are sometimes humorous and clumsy at the same time, and I do appreciate the voice-over though it isn't the best but they did give out their best.
It should not be compared to Pixar's or any big production house, though, it is mediocre at its best.
The kids can discover a bit about the Ancient Soviet times and Sputnik space program.
The movie points out positive message like friendship, family and loyalty.
With family it is ostensibly a popcorn worthy one-time watch.
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesKazbek is named after Mount Kazbek, a dormant stratovolcano and one of the major mountains of the Caucasus located in the Kazbegi District of Georgia and North Ossetia (Russia).
- ConexõesFeatures O Sol Branco do Deserto (1970)
Principais escolhas
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- How long is Space Dogs?Fornecido pela Alexa
Detalhes
Bilheteria
- Orçamento
- US$ 25.000.000 (estimativa)
- Faturamento bruto nos EUA e Canadá
- US$ 14.408
- Fim de semana de estreia nos EUA e Canadá
- US$ 14.408
- 20 de mai. de 2012
- Faturamento bruto mundial
- US$ 8.553.835
- Tempo de duração
- 1 h 25 min(85 min)
- Cor
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