El Perro


Posted on Mar 26, 2008 By Julia Szabo

Cameo Media, 2004, 94 minutes

Available on Amazon.com

This movie is in the FetchDog Top 20

Shortly after I adopted a large, white pit bull named Angus from Animal Care and Control of New York City, I found myself fielding questions from passersby as to whether I'd seen El Perro, and whether Angus was a Dogo Argentino. I hadn't, and he isn't, but my dog's passing resemblance to a canine movie star made me want to see this film, and I'm very glad I did.  

Set in Patagonia, it tells the story of Juan "Coco" Villegas, fiftysomething and recently laid off from his job as a gas station mechanic after 20 years. In between looking for work, he lives in a small room with his daughter and her family, and tries to make a living by selling knives with decorative handles that he carves himself.  

Then one day he helps a woman fix her car and he's paid in canine currency: the lady's mother gives him a purebred, pure white Dogo. The dog's name is "Bombon Le Chien," Franco-Latino for "Sweetie the dog" - a seemingly ironic handle considering the dog's menacing appearance, but it's an accurate description of his gentle temperament. Juan is promptly kicked out of his daughter's home for keeping a dog, and the next phase of his life begins as he embarks on a potentially successful career showing, and renting out the stud services of, his new best friend.  

The film has elements of three other FetchDog Top 20 titles. Like Umberto D, it shows an old man and his dog enduring tough times, and director Carlos Sorin reveals himself to be an admirer of Vittorio De Sica by employing a similarly neorealist "that's life" approach to filmmaking. Like A Dog's Life, El Perro proves that, as long as you have your best friend by your side, you're never totally down or out. And like in Best in Show, as dog owners busily prep their canine champs for glory in the ring, we laugh with them and at them.  

The performances by the human actors are all excellent, but they are easily surpassed by the movie's real star, a Dogo named Gregorio, whose handsome head and muscular physique make him a worthy pinup. I'm sure Angus is extremely flattered to have been mistaken for such a splendid animal, for according to the Dogo Argentino Club of America, the breed's key traits are: Coat of White Satin, Body of Steel, Heart of Gold.

There's some bittersweet business at the end that's yet another a compelling argument for spaying female dogs, who have always had it rougher than their male counterparts, and still do. But otherwise this is a near-perfect film. 

 

Presence of dogs: reelreelreelreel
Respect for dogs: reelreelreelreel
Canine star quality: reelreelreelreel
Family friendly: reelreelreelreel


 

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