Strays Fetches Itself Onto Blu-ray, DVD, and Peacock

Following its theatrical release, audiences can bring Strays home on Blu-ray, DVD, Digital, or watch the film on Peacock. The Digital and Peacock releases are on October 6 while the physical media release is on October 10. Please remember to make sure that your four-legged friends are also in the room.

What follows is my original review from this past August:

Homeward Bound is a family-friendly adventure of animals finding their way back home but Strays is the raunchy Homeward Bound.

I know what you’re thinking. Doesn’t this film have talking animals? Well, yes, but it’s not a film that you should be bringing your younger children to see. Unless you want to answer questions about certain words or activities, please keep them at home! It might make you cool with the teenagers unless they’re embarrassed to be seen with you in a theater. Listen, my mom took my brother and I to see American Pie when it opened in theaters but you do you, okay. But as I was saying: this is not a film for kids! It is one of the raunchiest movies of the year.

Doug (Will Forte) is the worst person in the world. He should not be taking care of any dog, let alone Reggie (Will Ferrell). With Doug’s life in the dumps and Reggie, a Border Terrier, always finding his away home, the man decides to drive three hours away and leave Reggie to find for himself. The domesticated dog now finds himself in with the strays but all he wants to do is get back to Doug. That is, until he meets a Boston Terrier named Bug (Jamie Foxx). Bug teaches him the rules of the trade but Reggie is still insistent on getting back to Doug. Their joined on the adventure by an Australian Shepherd, Maggie (Isla Fisher), and emotional support therapy Great Dane Hunter (Randall Park). As Reggie digs deep into his past, his quest to get back to Doug becomes a different quest.

(from left) Elsa (plays Maggie), Bennie (plays Bug), Sophie (plays Reggie), Dalin (plays Hunter), and director Josh Greenbaum on the set of Strays.
(from left) Elsa (plays Maggie), Bennie (plays Bug), Sophie (plays Reggie), Dalin (plays Hunter), and director Josh Greenbaum on the set of Strays. © 2023 Universal Studios. All Rights Reserved. (Chuck Zlotnick/Universal Pictures)

I’m not going to get into the spoilers here. All you need to know is that this raunchy film is not for kids. There are things that happen in this film. Things that I’m not going to get into. But again, I can’t help but find myself rooting for Reggie when it happens. Would I want the same thing happening to abusive dog owners in the real world? Let’s just say: Karma is a Bitch. If not for screenwriter Dan Perrault having an idea for subverting the dog movie genre that traditionally brings audiences to tears and bringing his pitch to producer Erik Feig, Strays would not even be filling the R-rated dog movie whole in our hearts this August.

It features a lot of hysterical gags that honestly go further than Josh Greenbaum’s previous outing, Barb and Star Go to Vista Del Mar. Are there gags that will make you cringe while laughing hysterically? Oh, yes. Will you feel better for doing so? My guess is yes. Again, this is one of the raunchiest films of the year. By my count, it’s the third film produced by Phil Lord and Chris Miller this year after Cocaine Bear and Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse. I do not know if this film will become a cult classic but we shall see what happens. One thing for sure is that Lord and Miller producing is good enough for me.

Strays is a different type of movie about the unconditional love that dogs share for their owners. What happens when the love is missing? This is where their friendship with other dogs enter the picture. But yeah, keep people like Doug as far away from dogs as possible. There’s a special place in the eternal barbeque for Doug.

Bonus Features:

  • Talk Like a Dog – Meet the humans behind the dogs as Will Ferrell, Jamie Foxx, Isla Fisher, and Randall Park discuss how they got into the canine mindset to voice their roles.
  • The Ultimate Treat: Making STRAYS – Go on a journey with filmmakers and cast and share in their joy at bringing this unique film to the big screen.
  • Poop, Booms, and Shrooms – You’d be surprised how challenging it is filming big scenes with non-human actors. In this piece we take a look at how the filmmaking team executed some of the film’s most memorable sequences.
  • Will Forte: STRAY Actor – Sit down with Will Forte and learn what it’s like playing someone we all hate. Filmmakers and his castmates join in to reveal why Will was the best man for the job.
  • Training to be STRAY – Sit, stay, pee, hump? Take a look at the creative methods used by trainers to get the canines to perform.
  • A New Best Friend – The bond between human and dog is undeniable. So much so that director Josh Greenbaum couldn’t resist bringing a stray from set home with him.
  • Feature commentary with Director/Producer Josh Greenbaum and Screenwriter/Producer Dan Perrault

DIRECTOR: Josh Greenbaum
SCREENWRITER: Dan Perrault
CAST: Will Ferrell, Jamie Foxx, Isla Fisher, Randall Park, Brett Gelman, and Will Forte, Josh Gad, Harvey Guillén, Rob Riggle, Jamie Demetriou, and Sofia Vergara

Universal released Strays in theaters on August 8, 2023. It is now available on Blu-ray, DVD, Digital, and currently streaming on Peacock.

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Danielle Solzman

Danielle Solzman is native of Louisville, KY, and holds a BA in Public Relations from Northern Kentucky University and a MA in Media Communications from Webster University. She roots for her beloved Kentucky Wildcats, St. Louis Cardinals, Indianapolis Colts, and Boston Celtics. Living less than a mile away from Wrigley Field in Chicago, she is an active reader (sports/entertainment/history/biographies/select fiction) and involved with the Chicago improv scene. She also sees many movies and reviews them. She has previously written for Redbird Rants, Wildcat Blue Nation, and Hidden Remote/Flicksided. From April 2016 through May 2017, her film reviews can be found on Creators.

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