"Dag" is an Australian term for filthy wool on the hindquarters of a sheep. It also is a slang term for an uncouth person. Therefore this film is a look at several uncouth individuals. The m... Read all"Dag" is an Australian term for filthy wool on the hindquarters of a sheep. It also is a slang term for an uncouth person. Therefore this film is a look at several uncouth individuals. The men are all beer drinkers and dopers who wear Hawaiian shirts, long socks, and sandals. The... Read all"Dag" is an Australian term for filthy wool on the hindquarters of a sheep. It also is a slang term for an uncouth person. Therefore this film is a look at several uncouth individuals. The men are all beer drinkers and dopers who wear Hawaiian shirts, long socks, and sandals. The women are all in tank tops and hot pants and constantly after sex, but never enjoy it. On... Read all
- Enzo
- (as Sam Makhoul)
- Cheryl's Dad
- (as Frank Garfield)
- Personal Officer
- (as Charlie Little)
- Tina's Dad
- (as Jim Cox)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
Disgraceful.
'Dags' is so Aussie-centric that it's unlikely to appeal to an audience outside its shores. It pastes together a mish-mash of caricatures from daggy, suburban Australia but not the sort an overseas 'Neighbours' audience would recognise. There are laughs to be had, even if they come from familiar territory previously explored by Australian TV comedy shows such as 'Australia, You're Standing In It', 'The Comedy Company', 'The D Generation', 'Fast Forward' and 'Full Frontal'. The David Attenborough-style narration has been done before and done better.
Not bad for a laugh or two, but wait for the video.
"Dags" is the story of a group of young adults living in a world of bad pick-up lines, bad clothes and bad outlooks on life. When one of the girls is kidnapped, her girlfriends get jealous and decide they must take action to correct this unfairness. What follows is thoroughly unbelievable, yet you find yourself laughing at the pathetic state of the whole situation.
The guy at the video shop told me this was the Aussie version of Clueless - it's *nothing* like it. Overall, it's a dodgy movie that endears itself to Australian suburbanites who can relate. Overseas viewers might not get the joke.
The film meanders through these people's lives for a while before eventually finding some narrative momentum with Cheryl's kidnapping. The mockumentary section, which consists numerous short intrusions by an anthropologist providing observations about the dag subculture, is the weakest feature of the film.
The film draws on a tradition making fun of Australian stereotypes such as the ocker or bogan, which began with Stork and Dimboola in the 70s, and carried on to The Wog Boy and Fat Pizza in the 2000s. Though both The Castle and Muriel's Wedding provided successful and affectionate satires of Australian dags in the 90s, Dags, like Welcome To Woop Woop, falls short by not being funny enough.
Comedy is hard to get right, and this film only gets it half right.
Did you know
- Crazy creditsVisa, the credit card, is listed as "executive executive producer."
Details
- Runtime1 hour 23 minutes
- Color