A Little Vicious


Posted on Aug 20, 2008 By Martha Garvey
The Doc Tank, 1991, 30 minutes

Available at The Doc Tank (www.thedoctank.com)

To view a clip, go here: http://www.thedoctank.com/galley

Once upon a time in the late 1980s, there was a dog named Bandit who lived in a sketchy part of Stamford, Connecticut. Then, Bandit bit a neighbor brandishing a broom, got locked up, returned home, and then bit his owner. Though the owner, an elderly African American man named Lamon Redd, defended his dog Bandit as a consistent, excellent watch dog, the local authorities put the dog on death row, in part because he was a so-called "vicious pit bull."

Unlike so many dogs labeled dangerous, Bandit got lucky - thanks to his owner, a legal defense team, and an eccentric dog trainer named Vicki Hearne, a poet, scholar, and philosopher who wrote lyrical books about the lives of animals. This documentary, warmly narrated by Kevin Bacon, focuses on Bandit's stay of execution while he is trained to be a good dog by Hearne.

In anticipation of a crucial temperament test, Hearne trains Bandit on a rustic farm far from the tough Stamford streets. When we see Bandit perched on the front seat of a car as it approaches his bucolic training grounds, you can almost see him thinking, "What the hell is this?" Hearne seems to feel that Bandit represents a chance to regain Eden. Maybe. Nevertheless, while occasionally we see Bandit resist Hearne's training, he also appears to be a smart, funny dog who even climbs a ladder at her urging.  

Producer-director Immy Humes deftly captures the eccentricities of both the people who love Bandit most of all - trainer Vicki Hearne and Lamon Redd - with a great assist from cinematographer Jean de Segonzac and some sly music choices. Bandit's incarceration and rehabilitation illuminate more than a single dog's story; they expose some not-such-nice assumptions about race and class. Be warned that Hearne wasn't ever a warm and fuzzy trainer, and that while a kind of justice was done, there is no Disney movie ending for this quirky, sturdy documentary.  

When the film was originally released in the early 1990s, it appeared on the American public television series P.O.V. and on Britain's Channel 4 and received an Academy Award nomination. But Bandit's story must be told at a breathless pace to fit 30 minutes. According to an article in The Bark, Humes is considering revisiting her footage on Bandit.

Sadly, Hearne, whose books have been reprinted, and who wrote a whole book about Bandit, died in 2001. Let's hope wherever she is now, there are lots of dogs to love.

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