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Car Dogs (2016) Online

Car Dogs (2016) Online
Original Title :
Car Dogs
Genre :
Movie / Comedy / Drama
Year :
2016
Directror :
Adam Collis
Cast :
Josh Hopkins,Octavia Spencer,Patrick J. Adams
Writer :
Mark Edward King,Mark Edward King
Budget :
$1,000,000
Type :
Movie
Time :
1h 44min
Rating :
5.1/10

Malcolm is a brilliant, callous businessman who is a vicious, overbearing father. Mark is the sales manager at Chamberlain Auto, the dealership that promises to do "Whatever It Takes" to ... See full summary

Car Dogs (2016) Online

Malcolm is a brilliant, callous businessman who is a vicious, overbearing father. Mark is the sales manager at Chamberlain Auto, the dealership that promises to do "Whatever It Takes" to put you in a new car. But on a scorching hot Saturday in the middle of the Phoenix summer, Mark has a chance to get his own dealership - and out from under the thumb of his father. Mark has to sell thirty-five cars by the end of the day. The question: Will Mark do whatever it takes - including betraying his sales team and himself - to get what he wants?
Credited cast:
Josh Hopkins Josh Hopkins - Mike Reynolds
Octavia Spencer Octavia Spencer - Mrs. Barrett
Patrick J. Adams Patrick J. Adams - Mark Chamberlain
Alessandra Torresani Alessandra Torresani - Sheri
Dash Mihok Dash Mihok - Scott
Nia Vardalos Nia Vardalos - Sharon
Chris Mulkey Chris Mulkey - Malcolm Chamberlain
Cory Hardrict Cory Hardrict - Boyd
George Lopez George Lopez - Christian
Stefanie Butler Stefanie Butler - Ashley Chamberlain
Joe Massingill Joe Massingill - Green Pea
Scotty Gelt Scotty Gelt - Salesman
Victor Togunde Victor Togunde - Process Server
Gianna Frangella Gianna Frangella - Rameriz Daughter #1
Gregg Bello Gregg Bello - Caleb

Car Dogs was filmed exclusively in Phoenix, Arizona. The dealership they shot at was completely abandoned after the 2008 recession so everything you see in the movie was added, including vehicles on the lot. Today it's completely empty, inside and out.

Car Dogs was directed by an ASU professor and made by dozens of film students attending the university.

The movie was filmed in an abandoned car lot in Scottsdale, Arizona

The "blue screen" seen on many monitors throughout the movie is a popular automotive software program known as Reynolds and Reynolds.

Cast (in order of appearance): Mark Chamberlain (Patrick J. Adams)


User reviews

Grokinos

Grokinos

I enjoyed this film. The story is more about relationships than the main plot which is about them trying to reach a quota of 300 car sales. There is some very good acting. The film looked professional even though it was mostly made by students. The flash back type bits made no sense and I think the film would have been better without. The ending also I think could have been slightly better.

Overall though this is a good drama and in my opinion better than many of the big budget Hollywood dramas.
Zugar

Zugar

There is some serious talent both on and behind the screen in this movie. A tale of a single day in the life of a large car dealership. The movie was made by Arizona State University teacher and students from the drama school. They have a bright future in the industry.

Patrick J. Adams plays Mark, the son of the dealership's owner. They have a seriously dysfunctional relationship and the father manipulates Mark by promising him his own dealership if he can sell 30 cars by the end of the day. The father has weaseled a deal with an investor to purchase another lot (the one he promises to Mark) but only if they can come up with the capital, which is why they need to sell so many cars. The conflict comes as Mark tries to juggle his marriage, his job, his friends and co-workers and his own soul in order to get the deal done so he can own his own lot and run it the way he wants, honestly.

Adams is great as Mark. I love his performance on Suits, and its good to see he has the talent to play other characters. George Lopez, Nia Vardolos, and Octavia Spencer (in a short cameo) are the heavyweight names in the cast. The others are new or up and comers who do a fantastic job portraying the chaos and pressure of selling cars.

The beauty of this film is that selling cars is just the MacGuffin. The real plot is Mark's conflict within himself to lose the battles (firing a friend, lying about payroll issues, etc) in order to win the war (getting his own dealership) which start to take their toll on him. His wife files for divorce, his employees start to question his leadership, his best friend starts to question Mark's honesty, and his dad taunts him cruelly throughout. How Mark handles these things professionally and with his eye on the goal, not the journey, is remarkable writing. Adams does a great job pulling off this nuanced character.

Some of the other reviewers have mentioned how realistic the movie portrayed car dealerships and selling cars. Again, you could have made this about selling tires or boats or electronic equipment and it would have not changed much. It was about one man standing by his principles while coming close to crossing the line.
Mpapa

Mpapa

Just watched this on Netflix last night. I've spent over 12 years in the car business, and this movie is spot on. The shenanigans that you see play out here, are the same things I seen on a daily basis on the lot. Especially the way management talks to the staff as if they are worthless. It is a very dog eat dog business, that's not for everyone, and this movie captured it perfectly. If you're an old Car Dog, or a new one, you'll laugh your butt off at this movie, and point to several scenes and tell your family and friends, "see, that's exactly what happens!"
Scream_I LOVE YOU

Scream_I LOVE YOU

Mark Chamberlain (Patrick J. Adams) manages a car dealership in Phoenix and is constantly being driven by his father, the owner (Chris Mulkey). His father hangs a carrot on a stick in front of his son so he drives his workers. Mark's relationship with his wife Ashley (Stefanie Butler) is at the tipping point. The dealership looks like chaos.

This was an okay film. Octavia Spencer has a minor role as a customer and could have been better utilized as a smart mouthed sales woman who knows her stuff. Waste of talent. The acting was fine. The relationships didn't seem developed. I would recommend "The Goods: Live Hard, Sell Hard" (2009) as a more entertaining contrast to this feature.

Guide: F-word. No sex or nudity.
Kea

Kea

Being in the automotive industry for over 18 years it was nice to see something that shows the real biz. Most movies show us a scum bags with no morals or values. This movie touches on what true automotive professionals what. A owner/general manager that cares about the team. This business is about family. We see more of the coworkers than we do our own family and this movie puts that in prospective. There are and has been to many owners and managers that take advantage of there employees. This shows what we all want....
Bolv

Bolv

I have spent the past 13 years in various roles in a car dealership. I love that this film didn't villify the people just because it was a car dealership movie. There are all kinds of people that work for a store and this does a great job of showing that. The salespeople who live paycheck to paycheck. The salespeople who are super competitive. A person who would say or do anything to make a sale happen. The eager new guy ready and excited that the sky is the limit for his new career. Then of course the high strung management under the gun to reach a goal at the end of the month.

Character deveolopment was a little thin, but the movie made great use of the time it did spend showing how life in a car dealership affects life outside of work as well. The acting was good, the continuity was a bit off, and the writing was inspired. I've watched it 3 times and love it each time.

Patrick J Adams deserves a bigger part of Hollywood. Hopefully since he is leaving Suits we will see him partake in a few large roles.