Movie review: 'Sgt. Stubby: An American Hero'

Tale of heroic dog Sgt. Stubby deserves heftier treatment

Film review by Katie Walsh

The tale of friendly stray mutt-turned-war hero is the kind of true story built for cinematic adaptation. Director Richard Lanni, who has worked on documentary films and series about World War II, co-wrote the animated film “Sgt. Stubby: An American Hero” with veteran and Hollywood military adviser Mike Stokey. It depicts the inspiring and unlikely story of Stubby, a mutt who made his way from a training base in Connecticut to the trenches of France during World War I. For his heroic actions, Stubby became the most decorated dog in U.S. Army history, and a beloved figure at home stateside.

Movie review: 'Sgt. Stubby: An American Hero'
Fun Academy Motion Pictures Media Group via AP -- This scene from “Sgt. Stubby: An American Hero” depicts the famous war dog and the soldier who adopted him, J. Robert Conroy.

The short, squat, funny-looking little mutt that was Stubby isn’t exactly a war horse. Nevertheless, his exploits and heroics are memorable, stowing away on a ship to France, catching German spies, surviving chemical gas attacks and leading medics to wounded American soldiers.

Stubby’s story is so strange and inspiring that it cries out for the epic live-action biopic treatment, but that’s not what’s on offer here. Producer/distributor Fun Academy Motion Pictures has a mission statement to create films that “entertain, innovate, and inspire,” which explains the style of “Sgt. Stubby” — as gentle as it gets for a movie about trench warfare. There’s a certain amount of cognitive dissonance when it comes to the material and the approach that the filmmakers take, and much that doesn’t get covered in this short, 80-minute primer.

The choice to make this an animated film positions this as an entertaining, educational film for younger audiences, and while some gorgeous battlefield compositions are rendered onscreen, the style has a weightlessness that just doesn’t serve a narrative this dramatic. The images feel airy and roomy — without much to fill in the space, it just feels empty, an inauthentic digital facsimile of this world.

Logan Lerman voices Robert Conroy, Stubby’s master, and Helena Bonham Carter offers voice-over duties as Robert’s older sister Margaret, though the framing device of the sister’s narration, spelling out the emotional beats, is rather unnecessary. Gérard Depardieu gives the most memorable voice performance as Gaston, an ineffably French soldier who forms the “Three Musketeers” with Robert and Stubby (the way he pronounces “Stoo-bee” is a highlight).

This is a unique story, and the archival photographs of Stubby in his medal-bedecked uniform are a delight. The kinds of war stories that bring a little levity and light to the darkness are inspiring. But “Sgt. Stubby: An American Hero” is an ultra-lightweight version of the tale that definitely deserves a heftier treatment.

Walsh writes for Tribune News Service.