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From the dGenerate Films Collection
Old Dog (Lao Gou/Khyi Rgan)
A film by PEMA Tseden
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A family on the Himalayan plains discovers their dog is worth a fortune, but selling it comes at a terrible price.

The Tibetan nomad mastiff is an exotic prize dog in China, fetching as much as millions of dollars from wealthy Chinese. When a young man notices several thefts of mastiffs from Tibetan farm families, he decides to sell his family's dog before it is stolen and sold on the black market. His father, an aging Tibetan herder, is furious when he discovers their dog missing. When the father seeks to buy the dog back, it leads to a series of tragicomic events that threaten to tear the family apart, while showing the erosion of Tibetan culture under the pressures of contemporary society.

Pema Tseden (THE SILENT HOLY STORIES, THE SEARCH) is the leading filmmaker of a newly emerging Tibetan cinema and the first director in China to film his movies entirely in the Tibetan language. His third feature OLD DOG is both a humorous and tragic allegory and a sober depiction of life among the impoverished rural Tibetan community.

"Part neorealistic parable and part Jarmusch-like deadpan riff, Pema Tseden's sublime Tibetan drama focuses on a slackerish young man who decides to sell the family canine for some quick cash." —TimeOut New York

"Tseden's work is remarkable for shedding light on daily life in an oft-mythologized part of the world. In his films, Tibet isn't Shangri-La but neither is it just another part of China." —Steven Erickson, Sight & Sound

"OLD DOG is subtle and affecting film making. —J. Hoberman, Artinfo

"Has the look and feel of a documentary, which adds senses of urgency and immediacy to a tale that moves at a languid, but never boring, pace." —The Village Voice

"Raw and resolute." —Jeannette Catsoulis, The New York Times

"The most important independent Tibetan filmmaker now working in China." —Shelly Kraicer

"A beautiful, highly effective and moving statement about a culture in danger of disappearing." —James Mudge, Beyond Hollywood

"Spectacular!" —Leslie Felperin, Variety

"Perfectly incorporates the desolate living conditions of these outpost towns whilst magnificently capturing the majestic Himalayan scenery which surrounds them" —Patrick Gamble, CineVue

"Shows Tibet through Tibetan eyes, as it is lived and experienced by ordinary people" —The Culture Trip

Best Narrative Feature, Brooklyn Film Festival
Grand Prize, Tokyo FILMeX
Audience, Press, and Jury Awards, Cinema Digital Seoul Film Festival
Rotterdam International Film Festival
Vancouver International Film Festival
San Francisco International Film Festival
Slamdance Film Festival
  

88 minutes / color
Tibetan w/English subtitles
Release: 2012
Copyright: 2011
DVD Sale: $24.98

This DVD is sold above for home video use only. If you require a license for institutional use or Public Performance rights, click here.



Subject areas:
Asia, China, Family Relations, Sociology, Tibet, dGenerate Films Collection - Narratives

Related Links:
The Films of Pema Tseden


Related Titles:
Angry Monk: Gendun Choephel, a legendary figure in Tibet, turned from the monastic life he was born to (as the reincarnation of a Buddhist lama), to become a fierce critic of his country's religious conservatism and isolationism.

The Knowledge of Healing: The first feature documentary dealing extensively with Tibetan medicine.

Monte Grande: How do body and mind exist as an integrated whole? The eminent neurobiologist Francisco Varela devoted his entire life to answering this question. Featuring His Holiness Tenzin Gyatso the 14th Dalai Lama

Paths of the Soul: An astonishing journey of redemption, faith, and devotion, following a group of villagers who leave their families and homes to make a Buddhist "bowing pilgrimage" to the holy capital of Tibet.

Tharlo: Tibetan director Pema Tseden adapts his own novella about the story of a Tibetan shepherd's encounter with the big city.

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