Retro Reel: Greyfriars Bobby


Posted on Mar 5, 2008 By Melissa Holbrook Pierson

Disney DVD, 1961, 91 minutes - add this title to your Netflix queue  

This movie is in the FetchDog Top 20

There is no greater exemplar of the canine quality of loyalty than Greyfriars Bobby, a Scottish dog whose fealty to his master became legend.

When Old Jock, a poor shepherd, dies in Edinburgh in 1865, his only mourner is his Skye Terrier, Bobby. The dog refuses to leave his master, even in death, and takes up residence on his grave in Greyfriars churchyard. It's both beautiful and terrible to see, because his loss and innocent sadness is so palpable. But Bobby is not alone for long: the neighborhood children, as well as two good-hearted adults (played by Donald Crisp and Laurence Naismith), can't help but rally to the cause of the personable pup they grow to love.

The terrier breed's fabled tenacity and quick intelligence is everywhere evident in this particular specimen, who among other things has been trained by the old shepherd to fall prone on his side at the words "Die for your country!" A very neat trick. It is not hard to imagine that a dog like this would remember, and stand vigil, for all of fourteen long years. For this Bobby was granted the freedom of the city, and became a living mascot of the Scottish national character.

This movie, based on a true story as recorded in the book by Eleanor Atkinson, is from the golden age of Disney, when a film didn't have to drip sugar, drown in special effects, or carry the weight of a politically correct moral. It's simply a lovely gem, with a tremendous little dog at its heart.


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