2 |link|: Garfield

On paper, this should work. Bill Murray returns as the voice of Garfield, delivering his usual deadpan sarcasm. And for the first twenty minutes, watching Garfield gorge himself on room service and insult dogs (including a returning, thankfully minimized Odie) is mildly amusing. The problem is the pacing. The film grinds to a halt whenever it focuses on the live-action humans. Jon Arbuckle (Breckin Meyer) is reduced to a bumbling tourist, and his love interest (Jennifer Love Hewitt) has so little to do that she seems surprised she’s still in the movie.

★½ (2/5 Stars)

Garfield 2 isn’t offensively bad. It’s worse: it’s boring. You’ll laugh once (Murray’s ad-lib about "royal water pressure" is a gem) and spend the remaining 78 minutes wishing the cat would take a nap so the credits would roll. Save this one for a rainy day when you’ve already watched the actual Parent Trap twice. garfield 2

Garfield: A Tail of Two Kitties (2006) proves that a fat cat can indeed get lazier—not just in his fictional world, but in the screenwriting department as well. While the original 2004 film was a harmless, if forgettable, slice of nostalgia, this UK-set sequel feels like a direct-to-DVD script that accidentally got a theatrical budget. On paper, this should work

The plot is pure cartoon logic: After following Jon to London, Garfield accidentally gets mistaken for a royal look-alike cat named Prince, who has just inherited a massive, crumbling castle. Cue the obligatory "trading places" shtick, complete with a mustache-twirling villain (Billy Connolly, sleepwalking) who wants to turn the estate into a luxury spa. The problem is the pacing