Tony Law: Revenge of the Dog of Time at Edinburgh Fringe Festival

If you're willing to go with the flow, the laughs will jump up and wind you when you least expect it.

Review by Tom Hackett | 12 Aug 2007

Here we are at Edinburgh Fringe. Tony Law's second outing with his time-travelling sausage dog is a surreal, occasionally baffling and frequently uproarious experience. For those of you as yet unversed in the bizarre mythology that Law has forged over his last few shows, there exist 37 such dogs on the planet, most of whom attach themselves to a human for company on their adventures. Despite his Canadian accent, Law was in fact born in eighteenth Century Morocco, enrolling as a mercenary in the Sultan's army before hooking up with one such 'dog of time,' Cartridge Davidson, and escaping to safer pockets of time and space.

Law delivers this nonsense with such vigour and conviction, that it is impossible not to be drawn in to his increasingly complex comic universe, swept along by a narrative that is by turns whimsical, alarming and just plain weird. For this show, he has engaged the services of two other performers, who take roles as a polar bear and a fellow time-traveller, interrupting Law's stand-up to talk with him on the space-phone. Intent as it is on telling a story, there are times when the show loses pace, with lengthy scene-setting that delivers no punchlines. But if you're willing to go with the flow, the laughs will jump up and wind you when you least expect it. Great, genre-bending stuff.

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More on Tony Law at Edinburgh Fringe Festival:

Tony Law: Enter the Timezone at Edinburgh Fringe / Tony Law: Nonsense Overdrive at Edinburgh Fringe / Tony Law: Maximum Noonsense at Edinburgh Fringe / Fringe Therapy: Tony Law Interview