Paw Patrol: Ready, Race, Rescue! review – 48 minutes in the pits

This barely feature-length spin-off from the TV cartoon takes our gang to the racetrack and sends them skidding into tedium

They sure do churn em out. Here’s another episode of Nickelodeon’s animated TV show about a team of rescue dogs, jazzed up and padded out into a 48-minute cinema package. As a parent of a toddler, I’m not immune to Paw Patrol pester power. But I find the cinema outings soulless and depressing: three-year-olds disappearing into gawping trances, parents into the glow of their phones.

The new film feels like a cut-price knockoff of Pixar’s Cars, with a dull plot about a rally tournament where the star driver is a flashy but nice kid called the Whoosh (voiced by Joseph Motiki) and the Paw Patrol gang’s job is to crew the pitstop during the race. The villain is mega-sneaky racing driver Cheetah (Addison Holley), who introduces yet another irritatingly repetitive Paw Patrol catchphrase: “If you can’t beat ’em, cheat ’em!” When the Whoosh crashes out after being nobbled by Cheetah, firefighter pup Marshall (Lukas Engel) must take his place behind the wheel.

Can Marshall dodge Cheetah’s dirty tricks and overcome his lack of confidence to take first place? All the usual believe-in-yourself, hard-work-wins messages apply, alongside some screechy tyre-burning action. But there’s zero here for adults: Paw Patrol is action with stabilisers, training little kids up for big kid bangs. It’s so aggressively targeted at pre-schoolers that in no sense can you call it a family movie. And parents who’ve forked out for a flashing Paw Patrol toothbrush may blow a piston at the running gag about the Whoosh being a walking product placement, constantly mugging for the camera in his own branded merch.

  • Paw Patrol: Ready, Race, Rescue! is released in the UK on 24 January.

Contributor

Cath Clarke

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
Hey Duggee at the Cinema! review – CBeebies earns its movie badge
An hour-long compilation of favourite preschool TV episodes brings simple pleasures for toddlers and in-jokes for the grownups

Leslie Felperin

18, Jan, 2019 @9:00 AM

Article image
Lightyear review – Toy Story spinoff boldly going beyond with a treat from Pixar
This cracking origin story for Toy Story’s spaceman hero is fun and clever and reminds us why we loved Pixar in the first place

Peter Bradshaw

13, Jun, 2022 @9:00 PM

Article image
Lockdown watch: Asif Kapadia on setting his kids Hitchcock essays
The Diego Maradona and Amy director gorges on spaghetti western, succumbs to Disney+ ... but steers clear of disaster flicks

Asif Kapadia

23, Apr, 2020 @9:38 AM

Article image
Ne Zha review – scary demon-child animation
China’s highest-grossing film this year thunders to a bloody climax in a spirited but not-very-child-friendly way

Cath Clarke

05, Sep, 2019 @2:00 PM

Article image
Playmobil: The Movie review – borderline dopey kids' adventure
Anyone used to the turbocharged irony and comedy rocket-fuel of the Lego films will be let down by this sentimental separated-siblings story

Peter Bradshaw

09, Aug, 2019 @6:00 AM

Article image
UglyDolls review – fluffy toys deliver a fuzzy message
Cuddly cast-offs must overcome an evil mayor in an animated tale that urges us to cherish our imperfections – or does it?

Cath Clarke

16, Aug, 2019 @8:00 AM

Article image
The Addams Family review – ooky animation can't find a heartbeat
The latest incarnation of the mysterious and spooky household, from the directors of Sausage Party, is not creepy and not kooky – it’s bland

Cath Clarke

25, Oct, 2019 @12:00 PM

Article image
A Minuscule Adventure review – sweet animated tale minus Hollywood distractions
The lack of smart-alec seagulls is not a problem in this simple but not simplistic film for children full of gentle charm and imaginative soundscapes

Cath Clarke

06, Sep, 2019 @7:00 AM

Article image
The Lego Movie 2: The Second Part review – even more awesome
Duplo figures from outer space threaten the world of Lego in a ceaselessly inventive, eyeball-popping, nonstop gag-storm

Peter Bradshaw

28, Jan, 2019 @3:52 PM

Article image
Onward review – Pixar conjures big-screen adventure with wizard quest story
Chris Pratt and Tom Holland play teenage elves in this standard-issue but entertaining supernatural quest story

Peter Bradshaw

06, Mar, 2020 @6:00 AM