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Dogman – An Exciting Thriller for Dog Lovers

Posted on April 12, 2024April 12, 2024 by artpickles

by Anushree Ghosh 

100s of canines listen to Doug reciting Shakespeare from “Romeo & Juliet” – their ears are straightened up, sitting uptight – all ears to the man who loves them as their babies. “Dogman” has many such scenes where Douglas Munrow, played by Caleb Landry Jones just insinuates what he wants, and his dogs act in a jiffy.

The story is about a troubled soul seeking refuge in the company of dogs. But the narrative goes beyond showing the bond between humans and dogs, it is poetry on life’s sorrow. The first part is mostly about Doug’s troubled childhood and his abusive father. When restrained inside the premises of a kennel, Doug finds solace in interacting with the dogs. Leaving the premises caused him to be wheelchair bound where walking more than a few steps was to be life-threatening.

The second part is an eclectic mix of Doug finding his skills as an actor, and singer, and constant struggle to find work to support his dogs. Doug’s poetic life bleeds colour, turbulent emotions and resilience in the face of adversity. The scenes where Douglas’ gender-fluid personality embraces make-up in a dulcet voice are crafted in beautiful colours, almost mimicking the intense contrasting colours of life.

The whole film unfolds in an interview by a psychologist named Evelyn (Jojo T. Gibbs) appointed by the state to talk to the man dressed like Marilyn Monroe, unusually calm about the arrest made from a gothic scene with umpteen dead bodies scattered around an abandoned building.

There are a few stray elements that may not sit well with the storyline – Doug’s mother’s departure without any effort to help her entrapped son, and the entire heist sequence carried out by the dogs where they were aware of the layout of the house, an easy way out for Doug to break prison lock. The biggest riddle while watching the film arises from the sequences where dogs are telepathically aligned with Doug and do as tell – mostly not even in words.

However, if we consider all the cinematic liberty one can have while creating a movie – Dogman has a tight screenplay that binds you to the screen with great colours, frames, background music and sharply enacted scenes. These elements along with an immaculate performance by Caleb Landry Jones fuel every scene with a sense of raw intensity and emotional depth that captures your attention fully.

The end scene that portrays Christ-like suffering for Doug surrounded by the dogs is a reminder of all the suffering that a man goes through to truly be transformed or resurrected as something else – the journey of a broken self to mend the mind and body by creating ruses that fit the maze called ‘world’.

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Menu
  • Home
  • ABOUT
  • BLOG
    • Books
      • Saints Or Sinners – Ruskin Bond Treats Every Character Equally
      • Ever Raised Any Eyebrows, as You liked Reading While Walking? Milkman by Anna Burns
      • Samaresh Basu
      • Ayn Rand & Me
      • United We Revolt
      • Swapan Kumar and his Sleuth — The Cornerstone of Bangla Pulp Fiction
      • Subhas Mukhopadhyay: Portrait of a People’s Poet
      • A Legend Passes Away. A Legacy Remains. Forever.
      • Manto – Man With Unprocessed Raw Words
    • Art
      • Evolution of the Indian Art – Is it going to reach every corner soon?
      • Woodstock
      • I got the Blues
      • The World Learns to Rock – Part I
      • The World Learns to Rock – Part II
      • The World Learns to Rock – Part III
      • Kalamkari – Reviving the Ancient Art of Storytelling
      • Madhubani – A Celebration of Mithila Art
      • Women & Art
      • Hiran Mitra’s Japan Diary
      • LGBT & Art
    • movies
      • Dogman – An Exciting Thriller for Dog Lovers
      • The Adorable Teachers and Professors in Movies
      • Evolution of The Indian Film Industry : From Black & White to OTT
      • Evolution of Bengali Cinema— the Cultural Nuances, Portrayal of the Society and the Transformation in Popular Culture – Part 1
      • When the Characters on Screen Can Hear It Too — Diegetic Sounds in Indian Cinema
      • An Abstract Hunt for the Meaning of life – The Top Layer Philosophy of “The Banshees of Inisherin”
      • Cut, Chop, Cook, Clean, Repeat – The Great Indian Kitchen
      • Arvind Desai Ki Ajeeb Dastaan
      • Rituparno Ghosh: Actor and Rebel
      • The Making of Tamas
      • Ritwik Ghatak’s Partition Trilogy
      • 127 Hours
      • Naseem
      • Suraj Ka Satvan Ghoda
      • Qissa
      • Arvind Desai Ki Ajeeb Dastaan
      • Perfect Days – Finding Joy In Every Moment – Philosophy
      • Movies That Came Ahead of Their Time
    • Culture
      • Queer Languages – The Secret Code for Survival
      • The Revolutionary Dancers – Bringing Changes with Movements in Space
      • Skydiving In the Land of Multicolor Ashes – Banaras
      • Omar Khayyam’s Potions of Wisdom for Writers, Poets, and Rebels
    • Thoughts
      • Where are the Happy Coincidences of Hrishikesh Mukherjee & PG Wodehouse?
      • The Story of Love
      • Rationality of being Agnostic
      • Marilyn Monroe – Max Factor
      • You often penetrate my Mind
      • Poets of Passion – Rumi & Tagore
      • Once Upon a Time…in Advertising
      • Love Letter To Gulzar Saab
      • Books, Movies and Some Random Philosophy
      • Love and ‘Other Factor’
      • If you can’t fix it, you gotta stand it!
      • ‘Re-framing Stigma’ ⁠— LGBTQ and HIV
      • Unpacking the Transgenders (Protection of Rights) Bill, 2019
    • History
      • A Brief History of Bengal’s Sweat Meat & The Portuguese Influence
      • The Zenana System : History, Education & the Cosmopolitan Set-up
      • Kanpur as the centre of Revolutionary Activities
      • Shekhawati — Havelis Reiterating The Tales of Glorious Days
      • Mata Hari – The Weeping Mother Who Turned Into A Dancer & Spy.
      • Partition Literature — Was The Partition of India a matter of ego satisfaction?
      • Did the Muslims of India opt for the Partition of India?
      • The Partitions of Bengal I
      • Partitions of Bengal (II)
      • Qissa
      • The Woman Who Loved – Orchha, Madhya Pradesh
    • philosophy
      • Rabindranath Tagore and Buddhism: The Philosophy of Peace & Compassion
      • Loneliness & solitude – The Pain & Paradox
      • The Bell Jar by Sylvia Plath – Virtual Tour Inside A Depressed Mind
      • Fakir Lalon Shah – Voice of the Poor
      • Nietzschean Bad Conscience in Koreeda’s Shoplifters
      • Sigmund Freud and Psychoanalysis
  • INCEPTION
  • CONTACT
  • Beauty