Black Dog
Gou Zhen
Viewer Advice: Contains depictions of violence towards animals.
A taciturn loner and a stray dog bond in this beautiful tale of cross-species kindred spirits set against widescreen images of the Gobi Desert.
It’s 2008 and, far from the Beijing Olympics, Lang (Eddie Peng, Are You Lonesome Tonight?, MIFF 2022) returns from a stint in prison to the decaying hometown he hasn’t seen in years. There, he finds no-one is happy to welcome him back, and the arid settlement is about to be demolished to build large-scale factories. Haunted by the past and confronted with an uncertain future, Lang tries to get work as a ‘bounty hunter’ of stray dogs but ends up falling into an unlikely camaraderie with a rabid dog he’s forced to quarantine with.
The film’s breakout canine star, Xiao Xin, was adopted by Peng after the shoot. The pair travelled to Cannes together, where Black Dog screened in the Un Certain Regard sidebar – and where Xiao Xin won the Palm Dog’s Grand Jury Prize. Filled with expansive imagery and percolating with sly cultural critique, Guan Hu’s poignant latest has earned comparisons to the work of Jia Zhang-ke (who appears herein as a dog hunter!). Depicting human–animal friendship without excessive sentimentality, Black Dog meets its titular character on his own terms, finding profundity in the interplay of two different but simpatico species.
“Has the grandly cinematic vision to lend an intimate tale a gloriously epic, allegorical edge … Dipped in the caustic soda of social commentary and steeped in the tradition of film noir.” – Variety
———
This film also screens as part of MIFF’s Food & Film program with a bespoke dining experience. Find out more here.
Tickets
For information about the accessible services being offered at MIFF, please visit miff.com.au/access. If you require any access service, such as wheelchair/step-free access, for any MIFF session, please call 03 8660 4888 or email boxoffice@miff.com.au to book your ticket.
You might also like ...
A menagerie adrift on a boat must work together to survive a catastrophic flood in this animated wonder arriving from Cannes Un Certain Regard.
Fresh from Cannes competition, Jia Zhang-ke’s latest portrait of Chinese society in flux is an epic drawn from over two decades of footage.
A Wiseman-esque study of a Japanese village’s Shinto shrine whose feline residents bring the local humans joy, solace and sometimes consternation.