Lady and the Tramp
Be loyal. Be brave. Be loved.
Overview
The love story between a pampered Cocker Spaniel named Lady and a streetwise mongrel named Tramp. Lady finds herself out on the street after her owners have a baby and is saved from a pack by Tramp, who tries to show her to live her life footloose and collar-free.
Backdrop
What makes this movie Worth Watching
Lady and the Tramp (2019) is a Disney live-action/CGI remake of the 1955 animated classic. The movie aims to modernize the story while maintaining its heartwarming charm, which resonates with both old and new audiences.
- The animation is visually stunning, with a realistic and charming portrayal of 1950s America.
- The voice cast, including Tessa Thompson, Justin Theroux, and Janelle Monáe, delivers engaging and memorable performances.
- The movie maintains the original's classic romance while introducing fresh themes about family and loyalty.
- The film's updated musical numbers are catchy and add to the overall enjoyment.
Fun Facts
- In the original 1955 film, Lady and Tramp share a spaghetti scene where they accidentally eat from the same plate. In the 2019 remake, this scene was replicated with real dogs, requiring numerous takes to get it right.
- The song 'He's a Tramp' is performed by jazz singer Kellie Loftus, who also voiced Darling in the film.
- One of the cats in the movie, Boris, is named after Boris Karloff, who played the original voice of the Mad Scientist Maleficent in Sleeping Beauty (1959).
Available Languages
No Translations Data Found
Where to Watch
Cast
Crew
Reviews
Needless? Yes. Enjoyable? Also, yes.
I'm not entirely sure 'Lady and the Tramp' was a film that needed remaking but here we are. This 2019 production is solid. I like the way it is shot and brought to life. It's rewritten in a few parts, to mostly positive effect - though the original film is still, by a fair distance, best.
I wouldn't say the cast are anything exceptional but they do what's needed. Tessa Thompson and Justin Theroux give good performances as Lady and Tramp respectively, while Adrian Martinez's Elliot is probably the character I'll remember most - away from the two dogs, of course. Janelle Monáe, Sam Elliott and Yvette Nicole Brown are decent too; even if it is difficult to picture the latter as a baddie.
They get rid of the "The Siamese Cat Song", though the replacement tune is actually fairly good. The other songs, like "La La Lu", remain but are obviously tinkered. The run time is longer, which I don't think was nessacary but they fill it well enough.
Solid attempt.
Pathetic, they cursed the original. The plot is not the same and the couple is now mixed-raced. Not only many positive white characters were replaced with black, but also the remaining white characters were given additional negative traits, so we got a movie with stupid whites and smart blacks - that's how it should be in post BLM US production. They used real humans and computer generated images but somehow they managed to make the plot less real than the original. It's ridiculous to see some of the first cars ever made and mixed-raced marriage in the same movie, did they forget that these were times of segregation? Obviously they realized this movie is bad and boring, that's why they used the same title as the successful production to get attention and sell. Waste of time, don't watch unless you are black and want to see your discriminated race finally appreciated in classic movie. The only reason it doesn't deserve the lowest rating is the fact that people who don't know the correct version of the title may be able to finish it.
Oscar Awards
Wins
Haven't Won A Oscar
Nominations
Haven't Nominated for Oscar