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Name Dogtooth (2009) Kynodontas (PLUS EXTRA)
TorrentDownload Dogtooth (2009) Kynodontas (PLUS EXTRA)Dogtooth (2009) Kynodontas (PLUS EXTRA)
Info Hash 783416a0f6d426dfe46a717d65f0a1298ba2ede5
Description Warning: Full-frontal nudity | Sex



Title: Dogtooth
AKA: --
Year: 2009
Original title: Kynodontas
Runtime: 1 hour, 32 minutes
Country: Greece
Language: Greek
Subtitles: English, Norwegian, Swedish, Greek (Selectable).
Genre: Drama

Director: Giorgos Lanthimos

Cast
Christos Stergioglou...Father
Michele Valley...Mother
Aggeliki Papoulia...Older Daughter
Mary Tsoni...Younger Daughter
Hristos Passalis...Son
Anna Kalaitzidou...Christina
Alexander Voulgaris...Dog trainer

Plot / Synopsis

Three young people exist in a strange world of their parents' devising in this bizarre drama from writer and director Yorgos Lanthimos. A father and mother live in a large house on the outskirts of town with their three children, whose ages range from mid-teens to early twenties. The children have never been allowed to leave the house (which is surrounded by a tall fence), and their knowledge of the outside world has been strictly controlled by their parents, who have chosen to teach them only what they believe is important and have deliberately confused or misled them in many other areas. The parents quite literally treat their children like animals, and the only contact the youngsters have with people outside their family is Christina, a woman who works with the father's business and comes by periodically to have sex with the eldest son. Christina makes the mistake of bringing a present for the two younger daughters, and explains the custom is that they should give her something in return. This simple act sets off a chain reaction of events that has terrible consequences for everyone involved. ~ Mark Deming, Allmovie

Nominated for Oscar




Quote:
Giorgos Lanthimos' Dogtooth certainly doesn't lack for ambition. A father, pathologically opposed to the moral decadence of modern society, deceives his three children into living as voluntary prisoners in their isolated country home through an ongoing programme of lies and misinformation. It's a audacious premise that suggests any number of interesting narrative possibilities and carries an eerie relevance in the era of Josef Fritzl et al.


Yet the director presents his film like some surrealist, detached passion play, with blunt, direct symbolism, characters who remain broadly sketched from beginning to end, bizarre tonal shifts handled with little foreshadowing or apparent forethought and a refusal to anchor much of the proceedings in any kind of recognisable contemporary setting. Dogtooth manages intermittent flashes of genius; it jolts, unsettles and compels the viewer but the lasting impression the director's approach leaves is one of frustration, where the movie seems to raise an endless series of questions that never get properly answered.


Lanthimos begins by demonstrating the father (Christos Stergioglou) has tried to account for practically everything, bringing in Christina, a female security guard where he works, to see to his son's sexual impulses. What he and his wife can't plan for, they cover up on the fly; the first arc of the film establishes the family's routine as a series of blackly comic misunderstandings, where the children accidentally hear of something to do with the outside world and the parents have to twist and distort its meaning.


It's both chilling and frequently hugely entertaining, for all these are basically fairly simple gags. The children are convinced a model airliner and the jet passing overhead are basically the same thing. A new dog will arrive in their household through the mother 'giving birth' to it. A cat is a terrifying predator from the outside world that's sure to consume them if they leave the boundaries of the garden, and so on.


The conflict comes into the narrative when Christina, unfulfilled by the son's sexual performance, decides to bribe one of the two daughters into pleasuring her in exchange for trinkets brought in from over the walls - which proves to be the catalyst which sees things slowly begin to fall apart. Obviously many stories revolve around setting up a hermetically sealed world of some kind, then methodically pulling it to pieces. The problem with Dogtooth is the film never really feels entirely certain of how to go about this.


It's fairly apparent right from the start this is a dark story at heart - Stergioglou's patriarch is basically abusing innocents' trust in him, whatever his intentions - but the narrative never seems to manage either a smooth transition into madness or a convincing series of shock reveals. The plot points are obvious well in advance, and the tonal shifts anything but, so given how violently the mood swings back and forth the viewer can end up feeling they're being coerced into belly-laughs at incest, rape and fairly brutal emotional violence.


At times Dogtooth is certainly very funny - comedy entails laughing at someone else's misfortune, and so on - but given the father is so obviously a monster maintaining the comedy well into the third act feels less like creditable moral ambiguity and more like a simple error in judgement.


Not only that, the obvious ties to the real world despite all the surreality mean the film ends up setting its standards impossibly high. When did the parents make the decision to live like this? When did they start brainwashing their children? How is it none of the three ever challenged the status quo before now? If they did, why is it never referred to? Why has no-one ever grown suspicious of the father over the years? These things are either glossed over or ignored entirely, and the list of possible questions goes on for much longer.


Dogtooth is a daring experiment that will more than likely be of interest to anyone after a bold, inventive piece of contemporary cinema. It's capably acted by a cast who sell both the comedy and the otherworldly horror of the premise very well (at least, taken scene by scene), and it's crisply, attractively lensed and shot. But it's simply not half the film it ought to have been, and the film it evidently could have been given the obvious talent involved.


Poorly scripted, much too objective, lacking in the exposition its own script seems to demand, Giorgos Lanthimos' third film comes maddeningly close to greatness, but ultimately cannot clear the bar it's set itself. Some audiences will undoubtedly take it very much to heart, but on the whole it's difficult to give it anything more than a very cautious recommendation.













Technical Specs
Source: DVD 9.
Group/Ripper: My Rip.
Video Format: mkv/AVC
Video Bitrate: 1 807 Kbps
Frame Rate: 25.000 fps
Aspect Ratio: 2.35:1
Resolution: 720 x 304
Bits/(Pixel*Frame): 0.330
Audio Format: AC-3
Audio Bitrate: 448 Kbps
Sampling rate: 48000 Hz




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12/01/2013 11.04 pm

What's in the extras?
03/08/2012 08.45 pm

This film is not for everyone, but it is a very interesting and different movie! I saw it long time ago, but it still lingers on in my memory. I recommend it!
03/08/2012 07.42 pm

When is Alps being released on DVD? I really hate myself for not going to the Sofia Film Fest to see it - thought it would be uploaded to the site by now if any release is available...




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