"KEEP BUSTIN'."

White Dog

WHITE DOG is the story of a racist German sheperd. Fuckin Germans. (Just kidding.) The story here is about Julie (Kristy McNicol) a small time actress who runs over a white German sheperd in the Hollywood Hills one night. She brings the dog (who never gets a name, so we’ll call him White Dog) to the vet and pays for his treatment, then takes him in while she tries to find the owner.

Before long, some Ernest Borgnine looking rapist breaks in and attacks her. White Dog not only takes care of the fucker, he does it in style. He even manages to jump right through a closed window to catch him. Everybody’s making a big deal about the guy in ONG BAK being the next big action hero, well what about White Dog. This dog jumps and climbs over all kinds of crap. This is a great dog.

White DogOkay so now Julie’s real attached to White Dog. You could say well she saved his life and he saved her, now they’re even. But remember, she’s the one ran over him, that means she’s still in debt to White Dog. So that explains why she doesn’t turn on him when she finds out that he is an attack dog. The way this comes out, he viciously attacks one of her co-stars for no apparent reason while they’re filming a bit part for a movie. An uncomfortable day on the set to say the least.

So she takes White Dog to a Hollywood animal trainer (Burl Ives) who has a personal vendetta against R2-D2 (long story). She wants Burl Ives to undo the dog’s attack dog training, which he says is impossible. And then she finds out that it’s worse. He’s not just an attack dog, but a “white dog” – a dog trained by sicko bigots to attack and kill black people. That’s where Paul Winfield comes in. In one of his most badass roles, he plays a trainer driven by obsession to try to cure white dogs. He doesn’t even know if it’s possible but, “If I don’t break him, I’ll shoot him.”

So the movie works on a couple different levels. First is the CUJO dog thriller type level. There are many tense scenes where this scary looking fucker runs in slow motion, flapping his huge Gene Simmons tongue left and right, opening his freako jowls like those weird monsters in BLADE II. But more tense than the scenes where he attacks people are the scenes where Paul Winfield is trying to train him not to attack. He slowly puts his hand in front of White Dog’s whailing choppers, and you really don’t know what’s gonna happen. In fact, you gotta wonder how they even knew for sure they could film these scenes safely. Sometimes he’s in there wearing the protective gear and you assume it’s a stunt double, but then he takes the fencing mask off in the same shot and it’s really him. (I read on IMDb that Paul Winfield bred pugs, but somehow I don’t think that’s as hard as taming vicious German sheperds).

To add more tension, you got the guilt aspect. The dog gets out and kills a guy, but they bring him back and keep training him secretly. So Julie, Paul Winfield and Burl Ives are stuck with the knowledge that they could get busted, the guilt that maybe they should’ve put the dog down before he got out, and the uncertainty of whether this thing will ever even work.

Then the other level of course is a story about racism. About how hard it is to erase our racist past. People and dogs learn racism from the time they are young, from their parents or trainers or from bad experiences. And even if they learn how to eat a hamburger out of Paul Winfield’s hand does that really mean it won’t come out again? It’s also about guilt, with a great uncomfortable scene where Julie visits her black friend who was attacked by the dog, and pretends she doesn’t know what set him off. Because we don’t even want to talk about that shit.

This movie is top fucking notch as both a b-movie thriller and grade-A allegory. It’s a great mix of pulpy exploitation coating and high minded serious movie center. In fact one of the producers is a guy called Jon Davison who later produced ROBOCOP and STARSHIP TROOPERS, so this seems to be his kind of thing. Representing exploitation you got Paul Bartel and Dick Miller in bit parts, representing high class you got an eerie, tense score by Ennio Morricone. And of course it’s all very well constructed by the daring director Mr. Sam Fuller.

Not long ago, I’d heard enough about Sam Fuller to know it was time to take a look. I started with his three movies with Criterion Editions: SHOCK CORRIDOR, PICKUP ON SOUTH STREET and NAKED KISS. I liked all three of these, especially NAKED KISS which is probaly the least political/satirical and the most pulpy. The opening scene alone makes this one a keeper (it starts with a hooker and a john in a knock down drag out fight in an apartment; the woman gets her wig ripped off, then pours a big swig of perfrume down the fucker’s throat). But of the ones I’ve seen so far I’ve got to say WHITE DOG is my favorite. Completely absorbing, horrifying, thought provoking and original.

This is the best movie I’ve seen in a long god damn time. So it’s not surprising that it was shelved for years by the studio and has little or no video release in this country. Apparently there’s no legit DVD and the VHS I watched was an old Japanese tape with a FRIDAY THE 13TH PART 2 trailer on the beginning. Hopefully somebody well get a clue and put this one out. (Wouldn’t you know just a couple days after they anounce POINT BLANK is coming on DVD, I gotta discover another one to yearn for.)

This entry was posted on Saturday, March 26th, 2005 at 8:57 am and is filed under Drama, Reviews, Thriller. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can skip to the end and leave a response. Pinging is currently not allowed.

5 Responses to “White Dog”

  1. I too, thought this movie was excellent, it’s interesting that Vern watched this well before Criterion released the dvd

  2. Hey Vern, I noticed Sam Fuller’s WHITE DOG in your widget — loved Fuller for years but had never heard of it and just gave it a try yesterday. Absolutely fantatsic, unique, thoughtful! Amazing score by Morricone, superb performance from Winfield. Thanks for another amazing reccomendation which I would have never come across on my own. The idea that this film sat in the vault instead of being released is just stunning and apalling.

  3. I’m insisting on all my allegories being delivered in the form of a dog that can jump though windows from now on.

  4. I, wearing black clothes, walked this morning through the park to the bus stop. I came across a group of people, who were talking to each other. Suddenly their dogs, who were just lying on the ground and enjoying the nice day, started to bark at me and growl at me for no reason. With a smile I said to the owners: “Oh well, dogs don’t like me”. (Which is true. Dogs don’t like me. I got absolutely no problem with cats, though.) Then one of the owners said: “It’s because of the black. Dogs are scared of everything that is huge and black!”
    Got no idea if this is true.

  5. This is an incredible film. It seems of its time but still engaging and relevant today, the acting is top notch, the Morricone score is haunting. I don’t like to say bad things about the NAACP but them leading this to be shelved is mind-bogglingly wrong in so many ways. I honestly didn’t like the ending, but I guess you’re not supposed to (it just seemed…random to me)

    I think a special word needs to be said about Kristy McNichol – she’s amazing here, a perfect combination of plucky and sweet but also endearing and sexy. I don’t know what actress today would even think about taking a role in a movie like this, or who could pull it off. Her face-off with *SPOILER* the dog’s previous owner is electric and a scene I found myself rewinding over and over again.

    And finally – when you stop and think about the technicality of the dog scenes and everything he does, it’s jaw-dropping. The fact that he’s a full-fledged character played by real dogs and not CGI or animatronics is unthinkable today – it’d almost be like trying to have Caesar in Rise of the Planet of the Apes played by a real ape.

    Also – I’d also like to point out that we live in amazing times when you can catch this movie for basically free on Netflix Instant, considering how hard it was to find.

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