Retro Reel: A Dog of Flanders


Posted on Dec 26, 2007 By Melissa Holbrook Pierson

(Paramount, 1959)

Available on Amazon.com

Poster available on Posteritati

There are some movies to avoid when in a fragile emotional state; anything labeled "A Family Classic!" certainly applies. That's because, while you can count on a booster shot of moral uplift at the end, in the beginning you're going to have to weather the painful set-up.

Personally, I've never been in a strong enough state to watch Old Yeller. But last week, I sat down with my 8-year-old son to watch A Dog of Flanders. Not the recent remake, which has been fairly well Hollywoodized, with better production values and a real purebred Bouvier des Flandres in the title role. No, this is the one that shows the way they used to make kids' movies, with lots of hankies and a dog from the pound. This dog of Flanders looks like he really could have been a cart dog: big and yellow and nothing you'd find in the show ring at Westminster.  

I was covering my eyes and oh-no-ing within minutes of the opening, when the mean tinker with his dog harnessed to the cart denies him a drink of water, when he is so obviously desperate for some. It brought up the same emotion in me as when I see dogs left in cars on hot days, i.e., simultaneously anguished and murderous.

But then you see redemption coming. Literally. Along the road walk the boy Nello and his grandfather (Donald Crisp), impoverished but good-hearted, and they save the dog left for dead. The boy wants to be an artist, and for a while his new dog (which he names after Rubens' dog) helps draw a milk cart to make money. But with the grandfather's death--couldn't you see it coming?--the boy's fortunes sink even further.

Until they rise! Everything about this movie is simple. Predictable, of course. But in that lies its virtues. One's life can be saved from adversity by kindness, and elevated to the possibilities of art. In the direct gaze of a dog of Flanders' brown eyes, we see the reflection of both.

 

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

 


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