Set in Los Angeles where there are many people who owns dogs, this movie runs through a series of comedy and dramatic events following a group of those people who have dogs. It shows the daily crisis and events they face with their puppies and what is the effects of these dogs on their owners.
You know those Garry Marshall ensemble comedies like Mother's Day and New Year's Eve, where various strangers' lives intersect around a particular theme? Dog Days is like that, only not terrible.
Director Ken Marino's ensemble romantic comedy, mixing adorable canines and humans who need as much rescuing as the animals they adopt, is something of a shaggy charmer itself.
Filmmaker Ken Marino has infused Dog Days with a perfectly competent yet generally unmemorable sensibility that's allayed by the charisma of the various performers...
At nearly two hours it's incredibly long for such a lightweight offering but does have an attractive cast, a deeply sentimental streak and a certain furry charm.