Movies about dog owners and their canine companions have always been a popular cinema subgenre, especially in recent years as witnessed by such feel good entertainments as Arthur the King (2024), Dog (2022), Togo (2019), Megan Leavey (2017) and A Dog’s Purpose (2017). Taking an entirely different approach to family dramas like these is the 2024 Chinese film, Gouzhen (English title: Black Dog), an unsentimental, tough love tale about two pariahs in an economically depressed wasteland; one is a former prisoner returning to his village, the other is a stray dog suspected of carrying rabies. With their feisty distrust of other people, the two prove to be kindred spirits and form an unlikely bond in Guan Hu’s sparse drama of survival and redemption. In some way, the man and the dog are mirror images of each other in that they both function as lone wolves.
Continue readingTag Archives: Kelly Reichardt
The Year of the Hare

Road trip movies in which the main character goes on a journey with his pet is not that unusual in the annuals of cinema although the pet is usually a dog (Kelly Reichardt’s Wendy and Lucy, 2008) or a cat (Paul Mazursky’s Harry and Tonto, 1974). What makes Janiksen Vuosi (English title, The Year of the Hare, 1977) decidedly offbeat is that the protagonist Kaarlo Vatanen (Antti Litja) bonds with a hare that his car has hit and nurses it back to health as they wander into the wilderness. Vatanen, a marketing executive, has become completely disillusioned with modern life and tries to abandon everything – his career, his wife, his possessions – and get back to nature, living off the land and the kindness of strangers. In the process, he discovers a new best friend in the wounded hare, which is never given a name.
Continue reading
