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Taking his cue from a 1999 novella by South African writer J.M. Coetzee, The Lives of Animals, Hungarian director Kornel Mundruczoās āWhite Godā brings us a cautionary, surreal vision of a āonce and futureā Eastern European society where the superior few rule the others, and the others rise up in rebellion. Coetzee explores the idea of animal rights in his book of essays.
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After reading Coetzeeās novella, Mundruczo, who also co-wrote the script for āWhite God,ā wondered how stray dogs were treated in Budapest. āI was shocked,ā he told me in an interview. āI felt such shame that I am part of a system that while the cast-off dogs behind the fences were treated with such cruelty, while those in front of the fences, dogs with pedigrees, were treated well by their owners.ā He decided to explore using dogs to tell a fable about the mistreatment of stray and mixed-breed dogs by those in authority and what would happen if the canines organized around one dog and rebelled.
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In āWhite God,ā the mother of 13-year-old Lili (Zsofia Psotta) drops Lili and her dog, Hagen, off at the home of Liliās father. But Liliās father refuses to keep Hagen after an official shows up at the apartment, demanding that Hagen be registered and the fee that owners must pay to keep mixed-breed dogs. When Liliās father lets Hagen go in the streets, Lili is determined to find him. Hagen, who loves Lili, tries to find her, as well. But he must run from the dogcatcher and is forced into brutal underground dogfighting.
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Meanwhile, Lili tries to practice for a concert and live a normal life, but she cannot stop thinking of Hagen for long. When the dog is finally caught and put in the pound, he and the other dogs escape and run wild through the city streets in flat-out rebellion against the human masters who have imprisoned and mistreated them. āWhite Godā is not your average animal film, Iāll admit. We in the U.S. are so used to the feel-good animal story that most audiences would find this one is disturbing. Itās for grown-ups. It forces you to consider ā¦. CLICK HERE to continue reading at National Catholic Reporter