Stray Dogs (2013 film)

Stray Dogs

Film poster
Directed by Tsai Ming-liang
Produced by Vincent Wang
Written by Peng Fei
Tsai Ming-liang
Tung Cheng Yu
Starring Lee Kang-sheng
Cinematography Liao Pen-jung
Lu Ching-hsin
Shong Woon-chong
Edited by Lei Chen-ching
Release dates
  • September 4, 2013 (2013-09-04) (Venice Film Festival)
Running time
138 minutes
Country Taiwan
Language Mandarin

Stray Dogs (Chinese: ˈ郊遊, French: Les Chiens errants) is a 2013 Taiwanese-French drama film. The Chinese title of the film is Jiaoyou, which means "Excursion."[1] It was written and directed by Tsai Ming-liang and starred Lee Kang-sheng.

Plot summary

A man and his two young children, a boy and a girl, are homeless in Taipei. During the day, the father has a job holding up a sign advertising real estate along a busy thoroughfare. The children spend their time wandering around stores and the landscape, which appears to be mostly depopulated. The family meets at night to wash in public bathrooms and sleep in abandoned buildings. Only occasional casual conversations are overheard. Long wordless sequences pass of the man performing daily activities: eating, drinking, sleeping, smoking, urinating, defecating, sometimes weeping. Obviously depressed, he violently assaults, then eats, an anthropomorphic cabbage that his daughter has kept as a toy. A woman, the kids' mother or at least a mother-like figure, stealthily observes the family. She "rescues" them from the rainstorm-drenched punt where the father has stowed them, and later joins the family in an abandoned building assuming her maternal role.

Cast

Background

Stray Dogs was the 10th feature film directed by Tsai. The film was written by Tsai, Peng Fei, and Tung Cheng Yu, and it was produced by Vincent Wang. It starred Tsai's regular lead actor, Lee Kang-sheng, as the father.[2] The two siblings in the film were played by actual siblings, who are Lee's nephew and niece and Tsai's godchildren.[3]

Themes

Stray Dogs is similar to Tsai's previous films in some ways. According to J. Hoberman of The New York Times, "Like other films by Mr. Tsai, it has a postapocalyptic feel. Torrential rain is virtually constant, and Taipei feels depopulated — a place where events, mostly concerning food and shelter, may be staged in situ."[4]

Tony Rayns of Film Comment wrote that, unlike Tsai's previous films, Stray Dogs "does away almost completely with continuity editing. Most of its scenes are single shots, and there's no causal link between one and the next. Some shots are so realist that they could have been taken with a hidden camera. Others are so stylized that they might well represent dreams.[1]

Reception

Stray Dogs has a 90% rating on Rotten Tomatoes.[5] It won the Grand Jury Prize at the 70th Venice International Film Festival.[2]

Stephen Holden of The New York Times wrote a mixed review for the film. Calling it a "glum, humorless exercise in Asian miserablism", he wrote that "Stray Dogs, with its glacial pace and disconnected narrative, often feels more like an art installation than like a movie."[2] He added that the film "sustains a hypnotic intensity anchored in exquisite cinematography that portrays the modern industrial cityscape as a chilly wasteland."[2]

Release

Stray Dogs was released in theaters on September 12, 2014.[5]

It was released on DVD and Blu-Ray by The Cinema Guild on February 10, 2015. The film Journey to the West was also included.[6]

References

  1. 1 2 Rayns, Tony. "Review: Stray Dogs". filmcomment.com. Retrieved December 15, 2015.
  2. 1 2 3 4 Holden, Stephen. "Mired in an Abyss of Despair in Taipei". nytimes.com. September 11, 2014. Retrieved December 15, 2015.
  3. Lodge, Guy. "Venice Film Review: 'Stray Dogs'". variety.com. September 5, 2013. Retrieved December 15, 2015.
  4. Hoberman, J. "'Disorder' and 'Stray Dogs' Capture the Look of Cities Falling Apart". nytimes.com. April 9, 2015. Retrieved December 15, 2015.
  5. 1 2 "Stray Dogs (2014)". rottentomatoes.com. Retrieved December 15, 2015.
  6. "Stray Dogs (2013)". allmovie.com. Retrieved December 15, 2015.
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