Chola and Football are a couple of street dogs that live in the Los Reyes skatepark. A microcosm is organized around them, composed of things, animals and young adolescents in conflict with ... Read allChola and Football are a couple of street dogs that live in the Los Reyes skatepark. A microcosm is organized around them, composed of things, animals and young adolescents in conflict with an adult world that they reject but are required to enter.Chola and Football are a couple of street dogs that live in the Los Reyes skatepark. A microcosm is organized around them, composed of things, animals and young adolescents in conflict with an adult world that they reject but are required to enter.
- Directors
- Awards
- 6 wins & 8 nominations total
Featured reviews
The setting is an average skateboard park in the middle of a big city ... in this case, Santiago, Chile. The filmmakers originally set out to make a film about the teens and early twenty-somethings who frequent the park, but had trouble getting them to talk on camera (understandably, it turns out). Eventually, the documentarians noticed the two large dogs that appeared to live in the park: a black lab-ish female and a shaggy, bearlike but easygoing male.
So the filmmakers chose to shoot a documentary about the dogs instead; at least, that's what they SAID they were doing. And in fact, the pair of canines fill the screen for most of the 78 minutes of this largely wordless documentary -- you see their toys, their habits, how they treat each other, the lab chases passing donkeys and motorcycles, and they occasionally interact with humans but seem largely unconcerned with most of the scraping and rattling skateboards whizzing around them.
However, the microphone also periodically picked up conversations between the skateboarders: discussions of drug deals, booze and pot benders, reports of arguments with family, violent confrontations with cops, phone chats with friends who are new or expectant mothers, honest self-assessments of faults, errors, and the aimlessness of their lives.
It's a curiously calm, mostly relaxed series of days, nights, weather changes, with no ostensible story arc let alone onscreen drama (at least in human terms). The park's street art and graffiti get temporarily painted over and speakers and bleachers are set up for a festival that only mildly disrupts the life of the "residents" . . . the dogs appropriate soccer balls and tennis balls, and the lab creates her own games with them (the other dog seems to prefer wrestling with and carrying large stones) . . . park maintenance people and sprinkler systems do their stuff in and around the other activities . . . someone sets up doghouse-shelters for the residents that they eventually make some use of.
Over the course of two years of shooting, the dogs got quite accustomed to the cameras being (literally) in their face. You get extreme closeups of nostrils, eyes, flies walking and laying eggs on fur, paw pads that resemble geologic formations with tufts of grass (the dog hairs) sticking out from between them. There may even be an onscreen death, which -- if that's what happened -- is the most subtle yet startling mortal event yet captured on screen, but if not, is still a beautiful piece of artistic license.
Not a film for everyone, this is an unusual and thought-provoking piece of work -- wonderfully shot.
So the filmmakers chose to shoot a documentary about the dogs instead; at least, that's what they SAID they were doing. And in fact, the pair of canines fill the screen for most of the 78 minutes of this largely wordless documentary -- you see their toys, their habits, how they treat each other, the lab chases passing donkeys and motorcycles, and they occasionally interact with humans but seem largely unconcerned with most of the scraping and rattling skateboards whizzing around them.
However, the microphone also periodically picked up conversations between the skateboarders: discussions of drug deals, booze and pot benders, reports of arguments with family, violent confrontations with cops, phone chats with friends who are new or expectant mothers, honest self-assessments of faults, errors, and the aimlessness of their lives.
It's a curiously calm, mostly relaxed series of days, nights, weather changes, with no ostensible story arc let alone onscreen drama (at least in human terms). The park's street art and graffiti get temporarily painted over and speakers and bleachers are set up for a festival that only mildly disrupts the life of the "residents" . . . the dogs appropriate soccer balls and tennis balls, and the lab creates her own games with them (the other dog seems to prefer wrestling with and carrying large stones) . . . park maintenance people and sprinkler systems do their stuff in and around the other activities . . . someone sets up doghouse-shelters for the residents that they eventually make some use of.
Over the course of two years of shooting, the dogs got quite accustomed to the cameras being (literally) in their face. You get extreme closeups of nostrils, eyes, flies walking and laying eggs on fur, paw pads that resemble geologic formations with tufts of grass (the dog hairs) sticking out from between them. There may even be an onscreen death, which -- if that's what happened -- is the most subtle yet startling mortal event yet captured on screen, but if not, is still a beautiful piece of artistic license.
Not a film for everyone, this is an unusual and thought-provoking piece of work -- wonderfully shot.
This dogumentary follows two dogs who live in a skateboard park in Santiago, Chile. You get to know them quite well. While they are currently not owned, they clearly once were, back before they got too big. The big dog, Chola, still loves to play ball and contrives to carry balls to places where they will roll and push them off. The even bigger dog, Futbol, definitely has "fetch" imprinted deep within, and carries anything or everything around -- a dead soccer ball, a bottle of water, a empty can, a rock, even a large, heavy slate paving stone.
It's not an easy life -- the heat in the park looks extreme, there are some nasty biting insects, and Futbol is not a young thing anymore.
The movie has very little dialog, and what little there is disembodied chatter from the skateboarders. Interestingly, their lifestyles parallel those of the dogs to some extent. But the focus of the movie is on Chola and Futbol.
It's not an easy life -- the heat in the park looks extreme, there are some nasty biting insects, and Futbol is not a young thing anymore.
The movie has very little dialog, and what little there is disembodied chatter from the skateboarders. Interestingly, their lifestyles parallel those of the dogs to some extent. But the focus of the movie is on Chola and Futbol.
An interesting viewpoint of life in a park as a stray dog - more or less adopted by the community. Relaxed pacing and ambient sounds accompany the daily goings on of the two featured star dogs as they live in the skate park and surroundings with the locals. Some hints as to what else goes on there as you get to eavesdrop on conversations - pretty interesting.
I just need to know if they feed the dogs at all while they filmed them for two years or even tried to help at all. I really hate the scene were they don't try to intervene when the dog humps the stray female, leading to more stray dogs. It was all irresponsible. The film was heartbreaking. I did enjoy the bond the two dogs had, but felt overwhelming bad for this bc all that wanted was attention, to be played with, and loved. And the druggie teenage kids never even acknowledged them. And the film makers just ignored them as well for two years. I liked a lot of the shots and seeing the city. I could have had less up close shots of the bugs. And how could you let those bugs just destroy the one dog and eventually lead to his death and not to anything?????
Details
Box office
- Gross US & Canada
- $30,418
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $5,661
- Aug 18, 2019
- Gross worldwide
- $30,418
- Runtime1 hour 18 minutes
- Color
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content