There are several films carrying the title of The Wild Dogs. This is the 2002 film directed by Thom Fitzgerald in Bucharest (Bucuresti), Romania. The film won 4 awards in 2002 from the Atlantic Film Festival and 4 nominations from the Genie Awards and the Taos Talking Picture Festival. It is not of Oscar quality, but it definitely will make you think, and squirm.
Several stories are twined
together into a slice of several days in the life of the rich elite and the
poor beggars of Bucharest. It takes place during the period of the
"cull" of the wild dogs which basically overran the city after the
fall of the Communist dictator Nicolae Ceausescu. The characters include, a
highly reluctant city-employed dogcatcher; a Canadian pornographer in town to
photograph fresh, very young meat; a cynical and corrupt diplomat and his
disillusioned lonely wife; bands of abandoned children; hideously deformed
"freaks of nature;" gypsies; beggars; and, of course, the dogs.
Unless you are a veteran viewer
of hard-edged films I really can't recommend that you watch this. Some of it
will make you angry, some of it will make you cry. Some of the language will
offend you. You will not believe that Dorutu (a human torso) and "Sour
Grapes" (whose knees bend backward as he walks around on all fours like a
large crab) are real people, but they are. There were no CGI special effects
involved in filming these characters.
The film causes extreme
disagreements among its viewers. Some hate it, some say it is an accurate
reflection of Bucharest. One Romanian emigrant said online, "Every country
they got their poors." Claudita_993, a Romanian who resettled in
Canada, said of the dogs, "I felt sorry for them and I despised them at
the same time."
The point of the film, from a
Christian perspective, is that the people in the film were the actual wild
dogs, aimless and hopeless, scrounging each day just to survive, living utterly
without purpose. There are no innocent people in the film, not even the children. The only
innocents are the dogs. It is a powerful presentation of the sheer lostness of
the world living without Jesus Christ.
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