'Isle of Dogs' will exclusively screen at Ayala Malls Cinemas starting May 30

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On May 30, help save the dogs from exile as Ayala Malls Cinemas exclusively brings 20th Century Fox’s Isle of Dogs at Glorietta 4, TriNoma, Market!Market!, Cloverleaf Balintawak, and Fairview Terraces.

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Isle of Dogs tells the story of Atari Kobayashi, 12-year-old ward to corrupt Mayor Kobayashi. Set in the Japanese Archipelago, twenty years in the future when canine-saturation has reached epidemic proportions and an outbreak of Snout-Fever rips through the city of Megasaki. Dog-Flu threatens to cross the species threshold and enter the human disease pool. Mayor Kobayashi of Uni Prefecture calls for a hasty quarantine: the expulsion and containment of all breeds, both stray and domesticated. By official decree, Trash Island becomes an exile colony—The Isle of Dogs.

Tilda Swinton as “Oracle” in the film Isle of Dogs (© Fox Searchlight Pictures)

Six months later, a tiny, single-engine, miniature airplane crash-lands onto the teeming waste-land. A pack of five starving but fierce abandoned dogs scrambles to the wreckage and discovers a twelve-year-old pilot staggering from the burning fuselage. Atari, orphan-ward to Mayor Kobayashi. With the assistance of his new canine friends, Atari begins a search for his lost dog, Spots—and, in the process, exposes a conspiracy that threatens to destroy all the dogs of Megasaki City forever.

The movie is writer/director Wes Anderson’s 9th feature film and his second stop-motion animated film, Isle of Dogs is a grand adventure set in a near-future Japan in the grips of a canine crisis and mass anti-doghysteria.  Here, in a far-flung floating junktopia known only as Trash Island, a scrappy pack of exiled dogs who’ve banded together to survive makes an amazing discovery:  the crash-landing of a little human pilot who will take them on a life-changing journey.

The resulting journey is packed with humor, action, and friendship. But on its trek, it also pays homage to the epic scope and beauty of Japanese cinema, to the noble loyalty of canine companions, to the hopeful heroism of the small and the overlooked, to the rejection of intolerance, and most of all to the unbreakable boy-dogbond that has launched countless escapades.

“We wanted to do something sort of futuristic. We wanted a pack of alpha dogs who were all the leader. And we wanted to live in a land of garbage,” says Anderson. “The Japanese setting came entirely because of Japanese cinema. We love Japan, and we wanted to do something that was really inspired by Japanese movies, so we ended up mixing the dog movie and Japan movie together.”

You can catch Isle of Dogs starting May 30 at Ayala Malls Cinemas. Log on to www.sureseats.com for schedule and advance ticket purchase.

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