Before leaving to fight in Vietnam, a group of teenagers play a game where they try to seduce the ugliest girl they can find.Before leaving to fight in Vietnam, a group of teenagers play a game where they try to seduce the ugliest girl they can find.Before leaving to fight in Vietnam, a group of teenagers play a game where they try to seduce the ugliest girl they can find.
- Awards
- 1 nomination total
Elizabeth Daily
- Marcie
- (as E.G. Daily)
Chris San Nicolas
- Dogfight Buddy
- (as Chris San Nicholas)
Ronny Lynch
- LCpl. Judge
- (as Ron Lynch)
Dale Carman
- Restaurant Maitre d'
- (as Dale Garman)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
The most atypical River Phoenix role, the furthest from his own personality comes in this film. In Dogfight River plays a young Marine recruit who along with buddies Richard Panebianco, Anthony Clark, and Mitchell Whitfield who are on a last night's leave and are heading from their Treasure Island base for a night of fun and frolic in the San Francisco of November, 1963.
The guys are about to participate in a really mindless and sick ritual called a Dogfight. The guys seek out the ugliest woman they can find and bring her to a designated bar where they're judged. The 'winner' gets a prize of whatever monies the Marines have collected among themselves. Talk about objectifying the female body in a negative way.
Phoenix hooks up with sweet and shy Lilly Taylor who really moved me with her performance. She and her mother run a coffee shop and she's a quiet kid into folk music, her favorite being Joan Baez.
While the other three have the usual night on the town for the Armed Services, Phoenix and Taylor find they connect in ways that they never dreamed possible. As they get to know each other the audience sees a more typical River Phoenix.
I remember seeing this when it first came out. It had a limited release and was restricted to art houses. The theater I saw it in was memorable too, it was the only one I've ever been in without a concession stand, not even concession machines. I guess in this no frills theater I was lucky they had rest rooms.
Phoenix and Taylor make a very lovely couple. It's a good picture for River, but Taylor was the one who really blew me away.
The guys are about to participate in a really mindless and sick ritual called a Dogfight. The guys seek out the ugliest woman they can find and bring her to a designated bar where they're judged. The 'winner' gets a prize of whatever monies the Marines have collected among themselves. Talk about objectifying the female body in a negative way.
Phoenix hooks up with sweet and shy Lilly Taylor who really moved me with her performance. She and her mother run a coffee shop and she's a quiet kid into folk music, her favorite being Joan Baez.
While the other three have the usual night on the town for the Armed Services, Phoenix and Taylor find they connect in ways that they never dreamed possible. As they get to know each other the audience sees a more typical River Phoenix.
I remember seeing this when it first came out. It had a limited release and was restricted to art houses. The theater I saw it in was memorable too, it was the only one I've ever been in without a concession stand, not even concession machines. I guess in this no frills theater I was lucky they had rest rooms.
Phoenix and Taylor make a very lovely couple. It's a good picture for River, but Taylor was the one who really blew me away.
This movie contains fantastic performances by Lili Taylor and River Phoenix. The story is very slight and it takes awhile to get going, but for ninety minutes I was interested in these people, especially Taylor. The scene where she orders dinner for herself in an upscale restaurant is very funny. The whole thing makes me miss River very much also.
I've seen it a million times, and it will always be one of my favorites. But what always struck me about this film is the silence - it opens very quietly, with no music and only muffled voices of the passengers on a bus. Our first views of the main character Eddie are of him sitting alone on a bus and at a truck stop. It is a perfect way to introduce a character that changes so much from beginning to end. In fact, the film starts at the end, and we are allowed to see the past when Eddie reminisces all that happened to him before he left for Okinawa. The movie has a quiet subtle way about it all the way through. There are tender, heartbreaking moments, but also moments that will have you laugh hysterically. Among the many issues the film addresses are honesty, friendship, forgiveness, war, and love. Someone said this is not a very romantic film, and I agree. It is not romantic in the way that most romances are. It is a decidely un-Hollywood approach to love, which is what makes it so memorable. The first kisses are not beautiful and elegant. They are awkward and uncertain in the most realistic way. They are not backed by melodramatic music, but rather the music that those characters would have really heard in their own ears. The poetry of it is that it ends the same way it began - in the quietest way possible, showing that for the two characters words are not needed.
I went to see this film because I am a River Phoenix fan, but when Ms.
Taylor appeared on the screen my breath was taken away. Never before
have I witnessed a more likable charater as well as an incredibly
sincere performance by such a young actress. I also was curious as to how anyone could tell a story about the Vietnam
war in a new way. Bob Comfort, the screenwriter is a genius as is Nancy
Savoca, the director. The closing scene is brilliant in its use of silence and facial
expressions. The war footage is minimal but poignant. This is a perfect
film and one of the best films eve
Taylor appeared on the screen my breath was taken away. Never before
have I witnessed a more likable charater as well as an incredibly
sincere performance by such a young actress. I also was curious as to how anyone could tell a story about the Vietnam
war in a new way. Bob Comfort, the screenwriter is a genius as is Nancy
Savoca, the director. The closing scene is brilliant in its use of silence and facial
expressions. The war footage is minimal but poignant. This is a perfect
film and one of the best films eve
On the day my friends and I learned of River Phoenix's unfortunate death, we planned to have a movie marathon that weekend. Apparently other people on campus had the same idea. By the time we got to the video store, all of the better known movies (Stand by Me, Mosquito Coast, My Own Private Idaho) had already gone. Someone happened upon Dogfight, of which none of us had ever heard. We decided to give it a shot.
What a fabulous movie! The "first kiss" scene will probably never have an equal: most movies show a first kiss as a passionate, perfect moment rather than an awkward and tense one.
What a fabulous movie! The "first kiss" scene will probably never have an equal: most movies show a first kiss as a passionate, perfect moment rather than an awkward and tense one.
Did you know
- TriviaRiver Phoenix running down the street after he left Rose was the last scene shot and was not intended. It was added last minute when everyone noticed the skyline. River was told to run and didn't know why. He laughed through the whole scene because everyone yelled "Run River Run!"
- GoofsEdward Birdlace says his birthday, November 26, is coming up "next Monday". In 1963 - when the scene was set - November 26 (four days after JFK's assassination) was on a Tuesday.
- Quotes
Walter: Are you ready to order?
Rose: Yes, goddammit. I'm going to have the fucking poached salmon, with the son-of-a-bitching rice, and a dirty bastard salad with a shitload of Roquefort dressing. Thank you. And um, who knows what this asshole wants.
Eddie Birdlace: Uh, I'll just take a fucking beer.
- ConnectionsEdited into The Green Fog (2017)
- SoundtracksThe Oogum Boogum Song
Written by Brenton Wood (as Alfred J. Smith)
Published by Bonnyview Music Corp.
Performed by Brenton Wood
Courtesy of Original Sound Records Co., Inc.
- How long is Dogfight?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- El amor es un juego cruel
- Filming locations
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
Box office
- Gross US & Canada
- $394,631
- Opening weekend US & Canada
- $18,736
- Sep 15, 1991
- Gross worldwide
- $394,631
- Runtime
- 1h 34m(94 min)
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1
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