Login  |  Register 

All Forums



Casting Forum

Crewing Forum

Writing Forum

Film Forum

Music Forum

General Forum

Film Reviews

Feedback


Post Message

Chat

Maillists

Search Forum

Forum FAQ



Remove Adverts

Year of the Dog (PG) US 97 mins
Reviewed By:  Jason Korsner 
Date: 2007-09-02

WHO MADE IT?
|
Director: Mike White
Cast: Molly Shannon, Peter Sarsgaard, Laura Dern, Thomas McCarthy, John C. Reilly, Steve Berg, Craig Cackowski, Brenda Canela, Chuck Duffy, Sonya Eddy, Nicholas Garren, Inara George, Dale Godboldo, Dan Kapelovitz, Regina King.
|
WHAT'S IT ABOUT?
|
Peggy (Shannon) is unchallenged and unsatisfied in her job as a secretary in a big company.
She lives for her pet dog Pencil – he is number one in her life with nothing else even coming close, so when he dies in mysterious circumstances, she really struggles with the grieving process.
Her sister-in-law (Dern) only adds to her problems with her rather eccentric behaviour and demands.
Then there’s a less-than-successful date with her hunting-enthusiast neighbour (Reilly).
It’s only an unsolicited call from her vet’s assistant Newt (Sarsgaard) that finally starts to give her life some meaning and direction. He offers her the chance to take in a dog, which would otherwise be sent to the pound to be destroyed.
Before she knows it, she has a house full of errant mutts, pulling her furniture to pieces, as her work and personal life crumbles around her.
|
WHAT'S IT LIKE?
|
This is a rather odd film to categorise. It starts like any other low-budget, quirky, independent character comedy, but it suddenly switches into something else entirely – an animal rights campaigning drama.
The film’s success or otherwise rests on whether you identify with Molly Shannon’s Peggy, but while in the first part of the film, she’s a likeable, mildly eccentric indy-film stereotype, when the mood switches, she becomes more like the mad bag lady next door, who doesn’t carry your sympathy to anything like the same extent.
In fact, by the end of the film, I found myself identifying more with her family, colleagues and neighbour than I did with the protagonist.
In fact, even Newt – the character who introduces her to the campaigning lifestyle – thinks she goes too far.
This is a film about a lonely woman who turns to fundamentalism as she has nothing else to fill her life – as such, it strays too far from its quirky comedy origins to keep that audience and could quite possibly lose the sympathies of reasonable animal-rights campaigners too.
The only people left are more extremist activists, and the more Peggy’s own life starts falling apart, the more this element appears to be mocked by the film, so I’m not really sure who it’s aimed at – different bits of the film will appeal to different audiences, but I can’t imagine the whole film appealing to anyone.
|
opens nationwide 31st August 2007

Rating:
More reviews

Terms, conditions, and acceptable use policy |  About UK Screen |  Help and FAQ |  Contact us

Copyright © 1999-2008 – UK Screen Ltd – All Rights Reserved