The Fox and the Hound 2

Old Friends, New Adventure.

6.0
20061h 9m

Best friends Tod, a fox kit, and Copper, a hound puppy, visit a country fair when they see a band of dogs called "The Singin' Strays". The band has five members: Dixie, Cash, Granny Rose, and twin brothers Waylon and Floyd. It is important that they perform well because a talent scout is visiting.

Production

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Trailers & Videos

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The Fox And The Hound 2

Cast

Photo of Reba McEntire

Reba McEntire

Dixie (voice)

Photo of Patrick Swayze

Patrick Swayze

Cash (voice)

Photo of Jonah Bobo

Jonah Bobo

Todd (voice)

Photo of Harrison Fahn

Harrison Fahn

Copper (voice)

Photo of Jeff Foxworthy

Jeff Foxworthy

Lyle (voice)

Photo of Vicki Lawrence

Vicki Lawrence

Granny Rose (voice)

Photo of Stephen Root

Stephen Root

Talent Scout (voice)

Photo of Jim Cummings

Jim Cummings

Waylon / Floyd / Additional Voices (voice)

Photo of Kath Soucie

Kath Soucie

Additional Voices (voice)

Photo of April Winchell

April Winchell

Additional Voices (voice)

Photo of Rob Paulsen

Rob Paulsen

Additional Voices (voice)

Photo of Russi Taylor

Russi Taylor

Additional Voices (voice)

Photo of Jeff Bennett

Jeff Bennett

Additional Voices (voice)

Photo of Grey DeLisle-Griffin

Grey DeLisle-Griffin

Additional Voices (voice)

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Reviews

G

CinemaSerf

5/10

These continuing adventures for 'Tod" and "Copper" are really only an excuse for some toe-tapping country and western musical numbers. The story is really neither here nor there. Travelling around, they alight on a band who take a bit of a shine to "Copper" and perhaps the big time looms? This puts a strain on the friendship - especially with the "Grand Ole Opry" beckoning and the pair spending less and less time together. Can "Tod" make his friend realise it's all a pipe-dream? Or perhaps it isn't - maybe "Copper" is destined for stardom? The animation focusses almost entirely on the speaking characters and that leaves the background looking very static and two-dimensional. The fairground scene isn't any better than the one in "Mary Poppins" from more than forty years earlier and the characterisations rely much too heavily on the songs. It's a straight to video exercise, this - the kids might enjoy it once, but I doubt it needs to be watched twice by anyone.

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