Rock Dog Quiz – Which Character Are You?

<span class="author-by">by</span> Samantha <span class="author-surname">Stratton</span>

by Samantha Stratton

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Respond to these rapid questions in our Rock Dog quiz and we will tell you which Rock Dog character you are. Play it now.

“Rock Dog,” a new animated film from an outfit that is not Pixar, not Disney, not Dreamworks, and not the People Who Gave You “Ice Age” and not the People Who Gave You “Minions” and “Despicable Me,” is, among other things, a movie that features a character who is a yak and is named Fleetwood Yak. You may have already heard that the movie, which is not from a proven provider of child-distracting content,

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All of these statements are correct. A co-production between Korea and China, “Rock Dog” was created by a majority of American animation artists. Even though portions of its plot appear to have been inspired by films such as “Kung Fu Panda,” the actual source material for the film is a Chinese graphic novel titled “Tibetan Rock Dog” written and illustrated by Zheng Jun, who also happens to be a Chinese rock musician in his spare time. There is a character in the book named Fleetwood Yak, who is, in fact, a yak.
But you shouldn’t waste any more time and start this Rock Dog quiz.

Rock Dog Quiz

But, to be completely honest, that is the most offensive joke in the entire film, which is feather-light, filled with primary colors, and less than 90 minutes long. One of the most intriguing aspects of “Rock Dog” is how unapologetically it is marketed as a children’s film. True, the voice cast for the American version is intended to appeal to a slightly older audience. Mr. Elliott provides the voice of the aforementioned Fleetwood Yak, and the role of the yak is structured in a way that pays homage to Mr. Elliott’s work in “The Big Lebowski.” However, despite the fact that the film is about a dog who wants to play rock music, there are no other winky pop-culture references in this film. All of the comic actors who are doing voice work, including Luke Wilson, Lewis Black, Matt Dillon, John King, Kenan Thompson, and Eddie Izzard, do their jobs with enthusiasm and efficiency, but there is nothing clever or clever-clever about it.
Also, you will find out which character are you in this Rock Dog quiz.

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The plot is ridiculously straightforward. An alliance of guard dogs and self-shearing lambs has managed to form a society in the Asian mountains (although Tibet is not specifically mentioned), which has successfully kept predatory wolves at bay. Khampa (Simmons), the patriarch of the mastiffs, has come to believe that music has no place in this society because it is too distracting, and has therefore banned it. One day, as his good-natured but lackluster son Bodi (Wilson) slouches around in a very neat wool cap that manages to scream “stoner,” a radio is dropped from a plane into the valley where they’re traipsing around. When he tunes into a specific radio station, he is completely taken aback by what he hears. He begins to dance to the wonderful, wonderful music, and so on. When he gets home from school, he takes out a koto/guitar from the village storeroom and starts strumming, which annoys his father. The old man, on the other hand, is a softie, and he accepts his offer of a bus ticket to the big city, where he hopes to visit Rock Park and learn from his new idol, rotter rock star Angus Scattergood, who he has come to admire. After Bodi arrives, a wolf pack led by Linnuxx (Black) takes notice of him. After being expelled from his mountain source of lamb chops, Linnuxx (Black) now organizes mixed-martial-arts competitions in the local sports arena and thugs around with his gang, with little success. Linnuxx, on the other hand, sees an opportunity to return to Khampa. While this is going on, charmingly naive Bodi (Izzard) struggles to make it as a musician in Rock Park, but is eventually taken in by pompous Angus (Izzard), who is having a difficult time writing his long-overdue new single and is intrigued by Bodi, whose burgeoning talent sees him creating a very nice blue fire when he strums his guitar.
Also, you must try to play this Rock Dog quiz.

What you’re about to read is as silly and innocuous as it sounds, and it goes down more like honey than cotton candy, which is to say, like very finely spun cotton candy. I had to pay to see this movie, just like any other normal civilian would have to. In spite of my protestations that I liked rock, and that although I’m generally more of a cat person, I also like dogs, so how bad was my review likely to be was not taken into consideration by the distributors, I was unable to get anywhere. So, at two o’clock this afternoon, I trudged to my neighborhood multiplex. I saw a nanny with a group of six-year-olds on the way up to the theater and asked them, “Are you guys going to see ‘Rock Dog’?” They said they were. “How about you?” And I realized that being a sporting event for an overweight man in his fifties by himself might not have been the best look for me. Regardless, despite the fact that “Rock Dog” is not “filled with rock music” (there are snippets of a Foo Fighters song, snippets of a Radiohead song, and one original song, and that’s about it), I can report that it captivated and delighted, and most importantly, made quiet, the houseful of small children and their nannies with whom I watched it. Seeing “Rock Dog” with confidence is a good idea if this is the kind of experience your current moviegoing habits demand.

For more personality quizzes check this: Rock Dog Quiz.

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