Release Date: Mar 11, 2003 Region: 1 Runtime: 101 mins Studio: Criterion Audio:
SWEDISH: Dolby Digital Mono
Video:
Widescreen 1.66:1 Color (Anamorphic)
Subtitles: English Packaging: Keep Case Rating: NR Features:
Shall We Go To My Place Or Your Place Or Each Go Home Alone? (1973): A 52-minute film by Lasse Hallstrom New Video Interview with Lasse Hallstrom Reflections on My Life As A Dog by Kurt Vonnegut Original Theatrical Trailer New and Improved English Subtitle Translation
Simultaneously elegiac and raw, My Life as a Dog is an uneven--but unforgettable--tearjerker which tells the story of Ingemar, a 12-year-old working-class Swedish boy sent to live with his childless aunt and uncle in a country village when his mother falls ill. Beginning with several representations of the most savage, unsentimental domestic intensity imaginable (interplay between a sick parent and loving child has never looked anywhere near as explosive), My Life as a Dog wisely doesn't attempt to maintain that level of danger; rather, the change in locale to rural Sweden is accompanied by a slackening of pace and a whimsical breeziness. Nevertheless, the tragic condition of Ingemar's mother (and later, the indeterminate fate of Sickan, his beloved dog, consigned to a kennel) hovers over the narrative with a gripping portentousness. At times, director Lasse Hallström misplaces the rhythm, and the film threatens to degenerate into a series of rustic vignettes; luckily, Ingemar's relationship with Gunnar, the jocular yet somewhat sinister uncle who essentially adopts him, carries a fascinating charge. This was later rewritten, whether intentionally or not, by Spike Lee, who changed the gender of the child, set the story in New York City, added a 1970s soul soundtrack, and called it Crooklyn. Swedish, with subtitles --Miles Bethany, Amazon.com