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Bouvier des Flandres

Original title: Flandersui gae
  • 2000
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 50m
IMDb RATING
6.9/10
12K
YOUR RATING
Bouvier des Flandres (2000)
Barking Dogs Never Bite(2000)
Play trailer1:26
2 Videos
84 Photos
Dark ComedySlapstickComedyDrama

An idle part-time college lecturer is annoyed by the yapping sound of a nearby dog. He decides to take drastic action.An idle part-time college lecturer is annoyed by the yapping sound of a nearby dog. He decides to take drastic action.An idle part-time college lecturer is annoyed by the yapping sound of a nearby dog. He decides to take drastic action.

  • Director
    • Bong Joon Ho
  • Writers
    • Song Ji-ho
    • Bong Joon Ho
    • Derek Son Tae-woong
  • Stars
    • Bae Doona
    • Lee Sung-jae
    • Kim Ho-jung
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.9/10
    12K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Bong Joon Ho
    • Writers
      • Song Ji-ho
      • Bong Joon Ho
      • Derek Son Tae-woong
    • Stars
      • Bae Doona
      • Lee Sung-jae
      • Kim Ho-jung
    • 54User reviews
    • 46Critic reviews
    • 66Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 3 wins & 4 nominations total

    Videos2

    Main trailer_Barking Dogs Never Bite
    Trailer 1:26
    Main trailer_Barking Dogs Never Bite
    Bong Joon-Ho – Making the Film You Want
    Clip 1:44
    Bong Joon-Ho – Making the Film You Want
    Bong Joon-Ho – Making the Film You Want
    Clip 1:44
    Bong Joon-Ho – Making the Film You Want

    Photos84

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    Top cast18

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    Bae Doona
    Bae Doona
    • Hyun-nam
    Lee Sung-jae
    Lee Sung-jae
    • Yun-ju
    Kim Ho-jung
    Kim Ho-jung
    • Eun-sil
    • (as Ho-jung Kim)
    Byun Hee-Bong
    Byun Hee-Bong
    • Janitor
    • (as Hie-bong Byeon)
    Go Su-hee
    • Jang-mi (Hyun-nam's friend)
    Kim Roe-ha
    Kim Roe-ha
    • Shadow Man
    Jin-gu Kim
    • Granny
    • (as Gin-goo Kim)
    Im Sang-soo
    Im Sang-soo
    • Senior Joon-pyo
    Seong Jeong-seon
    Seong Jeong-seon
    • Aengbali
    Jae-ha Jo
    • Aengbali's baby
    Chae-rin Hwang
    • Seul-gi
    Sookyung Lee
    • Seul-gi's mother
    Hyuk-Poon Kwon
    • Management office chief
    Yeongi Lee
    • Management office old-timer
    Yong-ok Kim
    • Management office director
    Se-Geum Oh
    • Grandma's relative
    Seong-hae Kang
    • Nam Goong-myeon
    Jin-won Lee
    • College dean
    • Director
      • Bong Joon Ho
    • Writers
      • Song Ji-ho
      • Bong Joon Ho
      • Derek Son Tae-woong
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews54

    6.911.5K
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    Featured reviews

    7Pjtaylor-96-138044

    Dog lovers beware.

    Bong Joon Ho's first feature is a pseudo satirical black comedy centred on a sad lecturer who decides to take drastic action on a barking dog that's mildly annoying him as he wallows in his own self pity. Needless to say, 'Barking Dogs Never Bite (2000)' is unconcerned with giving us sympathetic characters to root for. Instead, it presents everyone amorally, regardless of their actions. This isn't a bad thing, but it means that you have to be willing to accept - and, in some ways, see past - each major character's flaws in order to remain invested in their journeys. For me, that isn't an issue. I can see how it would hamper some people's enjoyment of the piece, though, especially if they're expecting something more traditional. Another thing that will likely put people off is the movie's unflinching depictions of animal abuse; basically, dog lovers beware. The thing never feels especially cruel but it's certainly rather shocking when it comes to its treatment of its canine characters. It's perhaps important to state, as the flick does in its opening titles, that no animals were harmed during the production. Still, there's a known rule that when a character kills a dog, the audience will start to hate them; that's why such an act is usually reserved for villains (and not often seen, either). This picture asks you to root for a protagonist who has partaken in such behaviour. That's going to be a major put-off for a lot of people. However, having said all that, I ultimately like the movie quite a bit. It's an unconventional and unpredictable mix of genres with several surprisingly exciting set-pieces. It's engaging all the way through, although it does slow down considerably for its extended denouement. It's often quite funny in its own sort of way, too. It's a rock-solid start for a director who consistently presents genre-bending, audience-challenging fare. 7/10
    6gbill-74877

    Lots of messages, lackluster plot

    There is a trove of criticisms of life in Korea embedded in this film, which was the first from director Bong Joon-ho:

    • The bribery of professors needed to get a positon at a university.
    • The corruption and the use of cheap materials in the construction boom of the late 1980's.
    • How the dogs of the affluent live better than many people.
    • How worthless a graduate degree in the humanities is.
    • How no one in Korea follows the rules.
    • How clouds of billowing insecticide are sprayed in a public area for "pest control."
    • How at great risk to herself, a bank teller is lauded for taking on an armed robber, rather than rewarded for just doing her job.
    • A homeless guy living in a basement who is happy to go to prison, where he'll get regular meals.
    • A woman begging for money on public transportation with her small child strapped to her back.
    • A woman let go from her job of eleven years because she's gotten pregnant.


    I love some of things he was aiming for, many of which are clear precursors to his later films, but unfortunately, the messages here are wrapped up in a story that's pretty lackluster. A man in a loveless marriage is trying to get a job as a professor and takes out some of his frustrations on the dogs in his apartment complex whose barking irritates him. A janitor in the complex secretly kidnaps dogs to stew them up and eat them. A couple of young women see one of the dogs killed and try to do something about it. It's all kind of blah, which maybe was also part of the point, but it didn't make for compelling viewing to me, particularly as the pace was on the slow side.
    7FilmMining101

    Solid directional debut

    Reviewed @Filmmining101

    Lovers of the Bong Joon-ho's (now) distinct style will find plenty to love in his directional debut, "Barking Dogs Never Bite" (2000). While the beloved South Korean filmmaker has indulged us into more socially conscious stories supported by sharp commentary around the working and human ethics which bound the film's world, "Barking Dogs Never Bite" is the first step towards an evolutionary scale of artistry that will attract moviegoers around the world for years to come.

    Starting his career with a less ambitious (for the lack of a better term) story, the movie features all his known trademarks you would have come to expect (e.g., imposing architecture, isolated main characters, layered storytelling). Dressed heartily with black humor, this comedy centered around missing dogs in a massive apartment complex has reflective undertones about a society that neglects its citizens (before they do it themselves first). Dogs, used as a symbol of status, currency and supply even between the lower socio-economic individuals seem to be having a better life than their owners live in a poetic sense of irony.

    Struggling to make means end and lacking a job, our "hero", a dubious and passive academic is in an abusive relationship with his pregnant wife, hates dogs and has no money to buy out his promotion to professor. This protagonist becomes the key player in a tale of theft, misunderstandings and social allegory which the West rarely offers. Typically in a Joon-ho flick, several elements are usually metaphors for the cast's state of mind and the story's progression: cigarettes breaks and dogs represent freedom in a world that relies on self catered interactions to move forward. Bae Donna's character is also stuck in a thankless position of building management conjuring an interesting dynamic with Sung-Jae Lee's pair-less academic and complementing the same coin from a different side.

    A master at blending genres with extreme efficiency, Joon-ho manages to generate suspense from the simplest of circumstances; an account of Boiler Kim's (who represents the working and honorable class of South Korea) tragedy feels like something that John Carpenter would direct, echoing similar sentiments in Joon-ho's own Oscar winning "Parasite" (2019) nineteen years later. When the final resolution comes in the complex parable of human relationships, Bong-ho's script keeps the audience guessing on whether this will end in tears or laughs simultaneously making it clear where he and his actors stand. Occasionally it does feel smaller in scale and less engulfing in its thematic presentation than the rest of his iconic filmography with with frequent tonal shifts and a not so likeable main character, especially for those who like dogs. But it is the birth of one of the most important voices in cinema which three years later will give us the masterpiece that "Memories of Murder" is (2003).
    10theorbys

    A ten plus comedy noir about zero sum lives

    This is something of a rarity, a indie Korean film. It's also Joon-ho Bong's directorial debut. It's brilliant. Slow, but impeccably paced and broadly intermixed with multiple levels of wonderful comedy, acting, atmosphere (a kind of existential (and cement) wasteland), and directing. Be warned. Pet lovers are going to be shocked, and maybe outraged. But really, don't take this too literally, Joon-ho Bong knows he is playing with your sensibilities and he knows that you know it (or you should know it by now, if you have been watching film, tv, and advertising for your entire life). This is real cinematic virtuosity.

    The promotion for this film compared it to American Beauty and that was a somewhat surprising but very apt comparison. American Beauty would be a fine double bill with this. But, if you have not seen any other Korean films you should give some a try. I saw this as part of a festival with JSA (Joint Security Area), The Isle and some others, but those two were very good and would also be good for a double bill. A little farther afield might be Tsai Ming Liang's the HOLE, or even farther, (and certainly not for the fainthearted) Go Go Second Time Virgin by Kosi Wakamatsu. Both intense looks at life in barren modern times and barren apartment complexes.
    8c_waddle

    very original black comedy

    I only found about this movie through the director Bong Jun Ho, who I think is a legend for producing Salineui Chuak. Anyways my hopes were high for this movie.

    This was the debut film for the director Bong and the camera-work and music scores are kind of crude for a recent Korean film. That's not a bad thing since it brings more vibrancy and tension of the situation, especially in the chase scenes.

    Some people might find themselves disturbed by the scenes with the dogs, but there isn't much in it, just the fact that they're not treated like your ordinary pet. Try to put yourself into a Korean's point of view where a dog isn't any different from chicken.

    The comedy element cannot be missed out too. The situations are so hilarious and fresh, it felt as if my new eye opened. What's amazing is that these situations look realistic and it's believable.

    Some marks were deducted because even though the scenes were original and executed well, the director failed to put them all together to have some sort of meaning. It's really weird how my favourite scenes are the ones that could've been cut (like the toilet paper scene and the ghost story in the basement)

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Made for around 950 million won (around $800,000/£500,000), Bong Joon Ho was hoping the film would break-even at the box-office, however only around 100,000 viewers nationwide in South Korea saw the film, concluding Bong to note that; "It was a total flop at the box office."
    • Quotes

      Shadow Man: Is that your dog?

      Shadow Man: No.

      Shadow Man: Then we can eat it together.

    • Connections
      Features Palwolui Keuriseumaseu (1998)
    • Soundtracks
      Barking Dogs Never Bite
      Composed and performed by Cherry Filter

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    FAQ

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • February 19, 2000 (South Korea)
    • Country of origin
      • South Korea
    • Language
      • Korean
    • Also known as
      • Chien qui aboie
    • Production companies
      • CJ Entertainment
      • Cinema Service
      • Uno Film
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Gross worldwide
      • $45,853
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      1 hour 50 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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