The legendary true story of the Red Dog who united a disparate local community while roaming the Australian outback in search of his long lost master.

John

Nancy

Jocko

Tom

Vanno

Peeto

Rosa

Jack

Maureen

Mr. Cribbage

Helen Sharpton

Jumbo Smelt

Vet
Most dog films chase your tears with a slow death and a swelling score. Red Dog earns its feeling a different way, by treating one kelpie as the connective tissue of an entire town. Set in the iron-ore country of the Pilbara in 1970s Western Australia, it follows a wandering red dog who adopts a whole community of miners, truckers and misfits before fixing his loyalty on John, an American newcomer played by Josh Lucas. The structure is clever. The dog has already died when the film opens, and the story is assembled from the tall tales locals swap in a pub, so Red Dog becomes folklore in real time. What works is how unsentimental the comedy is. The roughneck miners, the caravan park, the bickering couples, all of it feels lived-in rather than staged for cuteness. Kriv Stenders never begs you to cry. He lets the landscape, all red dust and big sky, do the heavy lifting, and Koko, the kelpie who plays the lead, has real screen presence and none of the cloying tricks these films usually lean on. It is a small film with a big heart, and it understands something most dog movies miss: a dog's real power is social, not just emotional. He is the reason strangers in a hard, transient place become a community. That is a warmer idea than one more deathbed. Full review: https://dogwithblog.in/red-dog-movie-review/
August 4, 2011

John

Nancy

Jocko

Tom

Vanno

Peeto

Rosa

Jack

Maureen

Mr. Cribbage

Helen Sharpton

Jumbo Smelt

Vet
Most dog films chase your tears with a slow death and a swelling score. Red Dog earns its feeling a different way, by treating one kelpie as the connective tissue of an entire town. Set in the iron-ore country of the Pilbara in 1970s Western Australia, it follows a wandering red dog who adopts a whole community of miners, truckers and misfits before fixing his loyalty on John, an American newcomer played by Josh Lucas. The structure is clever. The dog has already died when the film opens, and the story is assembled from the tall tales locals swap in a pub, so Red Dog becomes folklore in real time. What works is how unsentimental the comedy is. The roughneck miners, the caravan park, the bickering couples, all of it feels lived-in rather than staged for cuteness. Kriv Stenders never begs you to cry. He lets the landscape, all red dust and big sky, do the heavy lifting, and Koko, the kelpie who plays the lead, has real screen presence and none of the cloying tricks these films usually lean on. It is a small film with a big heart, and it understands something most dog movies miss: a dog's real power is social, not just emotional. He is the reason strangers in a hard, transient place become a community. That is a warmer idea than one more deathbed. Full review: https://dogwithblog.in/red-dog-movie-review/
