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Hounddog

  • 2007
  • R
  • 1h 38m
IMDb RATING
6.2/10
6.7K
YOUR RATING
Dakota Fanning in Hounddog (2007)
Home Video Trailer from Hannover House
Play trailer1:58
1 Video
44 Photos
Coming-of-AgePsychological DramaTragedyDramaMusic

A drama set in the American South, where a precocious, troubled girl finds a safe haven in the music and movement of Elvis Presley.A drama set in the American South, where a precocious, troubled girl finds a safe haven in the music and movement of Elvis Presley.A drama set in the American South, where a precocious, troubled girl finds a safe haven in the music and movement of Elvis Presley.

  • Director
    • Deborah Kampmeier
  • Writer
    • Deborah Kampmeier
  • Stars
    • Dakota Fanning
    • David Morse
    • Piper Laurie
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.2/10
    6.7K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Deborah Kampmeier
    • Writer
      • Deborah Kampmeier
    • Stars
      • Dakota Fanning
      • David Morse
      • Piper Laurie
    • 67User reviews
    • 38Critic reviews
    • 31Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 2 wins & 1 nomination total

    Videos1

    Hounddog
    Trailer 1:58
    Hounddog

    Photos44

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    Top cast24

    Edit
    Dakota Fanning
    Dakota Fanning
    • Lewellen
    David Morse
    David Morse
    • Daddy
    Piper Laurie
    Piper Laurie
    • Grammie
    Granoldo Frazier
    • Band Member D
    • (as Grenaldo Frazier)
    Isabelle Fuhrman
    Isabelle Fuhrman
    • Grasshopper
    Cody Hanford
    Cody Hanford
    • Buddy
    Charlie Lucas
    • Band Member A
    Herman McCloud
    • Band Member B
    Chandler McIntyre
    • Buddy's Mother
    Robin Mullins
    Robin Mullins
    • Marge
    Afemo Omilami
    Afemo Omilami
    • Charles
    Tom Oppenheim
    • Mechanic
    Tim Parati
    Tim Parati
    • Bartender
    Blake Rayne
    Blake Rayne
    • Elvis
    • (as Ryan Pelton)
    Robin Wright
    Robin Wright
    • Stranger Lady
    • (as Robin Wright Penn)
    Ron Prather
    Ron Prather
    • Truck Driver
    Christoph Sanders
    Christoph Sanders
    • Wooden's Boy
    Jill Scott
    Jill Scott
    • Big Momma Thorton
    • Director
      • Deborah Kampmeier
    • Writer
      • Deborah Kampmeier
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews67

    6.26.7K
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    Featured reviews

    4MattD12027

    Ultimately very disappointing.

    This is a bad film. It is not really Dakota's fault, but to be honest I wasn't really impressed with her this time around. I felt like she was a little too much, a little too melodramatic, and definitely not as real as she is in her other films. The real problems with this film lie in the directing, the script, and the pacing. It's poorly filmed (though beautifully lensed), the script panders to too many stereotypes to even enumerate, and even though it's very short, it crawls along.

    All the controversy about the rape is unfounded, too, because it actually is only a very small piece of the movie. You see her face twice and her hand once, and you hear her. I'd say it was 45 seconds. Maybe not even that long.

    Anyways, color me disappointed. Definitely not worth all the hype, and I really wish Dakota could have found a better filmmaker(s) and film(s) during all the time she wasted as this film sat in preproduction. I hope this doesn't affect her career too much.
    7LW-08854

    a slow burner.

    Shot in 2006 and released in 2007 this film has some good things about it. The acting is quite strong from Dakota Fanning, she does a very good southern accent. There's a nice yellow tint to it, colours look lovely, the production design very well recreates the 1950s rural southern poverty while the music of Elvis acts as a great soundtrack. The hot nights and church services and sense of reality is very much present in the film. It's a story of a girl who uses music to get through tough times and grow as a person. There's also a real loss of innocence that comes along too in the film and it can at times be quite grim. Religion is not well portrayed in the film either, it's fixation on rock and roll is shown as being ill thought through while one woman who prides herself as being a firm Christian is perhaps the most unforgiving character in the story. There's lots of snake imagery to it too. I also did wonder why nobody seemed to go to school.

    The film is also quite slow paced, very much a slow burner.
    7hi_im_manic

    Nice film about Jenny, but where's Forrest?

    Cliché after cliché is revisited, and yet this film still holds a respectable place of its own. Think of this film as a prequel to Forrest Gump, and it could be named "Jenny's Story".

    Here are just a few of the clichés to be seen, they are typical of a film set in the mid-late 50's, in a rural southern town: aggressive alcoholic cad of father who's always angry. Parents unmindful of children's well-being. Ramshackle homes in disrepair. Dirty, barefoot children left unattended. Kids buying and/or drinking beer. Over-zealous religious nut-jobs. Abused women who accept mistreatment. Trampy chain-smokers. Perverted pedophiles. Playing in the crick'. Soulful black people in oppression. Granny with a shotgun. Horrible homemade fashions. Blues and soulful music. Family love triangles. Home grown foods. Kids getting "whoopin's". Dangerous critters running amok. Pitiful characters. Creepy characters. Old myths and legends. Mutt gets shot. White plantation home. Corn fields. Sage older black man. Broke down rusted vehicles. A fiery church service... trust Me, I COULD keep going. It is through these devices that we get a real feel of the crude existence of some within our "civilized society" at different places and times.

    At least they spared us the usual overworked southern accents, and graphic displays of domestic violence!

    Let's face it. Some of these stereotypical clichés are completely necessary for a story of this type. You can't make biscuits without flour (southern pun). Fact is, many of these things were true fixtures at that time. My grandmother and aunts can testify as much.

    Fanning's performance is the feature presentation here. It's almost award worthy, almost. Perhaps it could have won, if in a different movie. She is convincing and displays just the right amount of intensity in this serious role. She is bearing the weight of a time-period drama of a sensitive nature, and does so remarkably well for someone of her age and career experience.

    Even when Lewellens actions are not wise, we understand that she's still a naive child full of hope and wonder. Lewellen is indeed precocious and independent but she's an innocent and ill-equipped to perceive why others will hurt and disappoint her.

    Family support is non-existent. What family she has is threatening and harsh. Family kills her dog, abandons her on a whim, can't provide, can't offer comfort or affection, makes her feel guilt and isolates her from her friends. Her friends and peers aren't very good either, when they can betray her maliciously.

    What Lewellen does have is music, a love for Elvis and his songs. Although such things are demonized by her grandmother, Lewellen finds a safe place to express herself within them. Performing Elvis' songs brings joy, a sense of pride, and something for which to dream in an otherwise depressive place.

    We want to see Lewellen succeed and have some happiness, the audience cares for this character and her plight. We wish her predicament weren't so bleak and the people in her life weren't so utterly worthless (save one exception).

    There was an ominous cloud lingering around the father during the whole movie, it was as if he may lose control at any moment and abuse his daughter. Every scene with the two of them together was uneasy, even though the daughter didn't behave apprehensively.

    I thought the sets on this film were pretty good, so sure, they need some cinematic showcasing. There's reportedly some goofs (dealing with cars) but since I'm not an antique car expert, I was never distracted. The editing could have been better tailored, I can't quite pinpoint the specifics that could have been improved to make this film a classic... several production values are just "off" a little bit.

    I did not find the snake imagery obtrusive. It conveyed the message of being strangled by sin, depravity, and shame. It represents the differing types of venom that poisonously consume a person... this message was depicted in various other ways throughout the film.

    One could easily sift through this film for life lessons and spiritual significance, and not be disappointed. The films ends leaving you unsatisfied, but at least it ends on the appropriate note.
    7joshsittre

    Dakota excellent again!

    I saw the premiere back in 07 in Sundance yes some people booed and some walked out. Some people will fault the obvious metaphors but Dakota deserves a 10 for her performance like Morgan Freeman she can save movies and she does here. The 'controversy' was not founded in the least. I also believe it to be her best performance since man on fire I will of course not give a thing away about the film or what happens suffice it to say her character is someone you want to see win even with her flaws. One scene dares you to see her in a bad way but it never seemed to happen for me. The movie is set deep in the swamps of the south. The first scene in which Dakota's character propositions her friend was a shock for me to I wasn't all the way prepared for her slightly adult turn yet I realized that she was making a turn or step forward in her career.
    8Cedric_Catsuits

    Fails to convince

    Reading some of the reviews here, and elsewhere, it is clear that the reviewers haven't actually seen this film - unless there are lots of different versions out there. They didn't see the film I did, for sure. There is no gratuitous or graphic violence or sex, and the only bit of nudity comes courtesy of David Morse's behind. If anything, a little more sex or violence might have enabled more of today's jaded audience to actually get the point of this movie.

    As I understand it, the story they are trying to tell (in my opinion, unsuccessfully but more of that later) is of an adolescent girl who over a short period of time, due to a sequence of unfortunate events, goes from expressing herself through the voice of Elvis, to eventually being able to express her true self with her own voice, with help from Charles (Afemo Omilami).

    As a story it holds water, is certainly - unfortunately - true to life and the central role is played with much maturity and sensitivity by Dakota Fanning (bar her mandatory screaming-for-no-reason scene) who may or may not have over-egged her performance (I don't know what was and wasn't said by her) but she is the one carrying this film, and it is not her fault that through clumsy editing and a weak screenplay the story kinda gets lost in the overall dullness.

    None of the supporting characters are particularly well described and just when we do think we're getting to know them ... cut to a completely different scene. It's almost as if this was a vehicle for a 12-13 year old Dakota Fanning, which is not doing her, her co-stars or the film any favours. It perhaps should have been longer, and less time devoted to the relationship with her father which isn't particularly relevant to the story I think they're trying to tell.

    My advice is watch it and make up your own mind, but don't expect to be shocked, disgusted, or entertained. The brief glimpses of humour and happiness are lost amongst the monotony of dull sound and scenery. Where's the rock'n'roll, where's the blues? Where are all the characters that surely must have been in the story, in the south, in the 1950s?

    A worthy attempt to tell a powerful story, but lacking in flair and direction.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      According to the site Slate, after playing family friendly roles for years, Dakota Fanning decided to her first controversial role as Lewellen in this film. The part of the Elvis fanatic included some very mature scenes, such as the horrifying rape of her character. The reviews at the time noted the public backlash of the role, and as Slate wrote, "Protesters of the film may be genuinely concerned that acting out a rape scene in a film is traumatic to Fanning." Fanning didn't take too well to her critics. She lashed out in a press conference in Los Angeles (via Today), "When it gets to the point of attacking my mother, my agent ... my teacher, who were all on the set that day, that started to make me mad ... They hadn't seen the movie." At the end of the day, the young, but seemingly mature beyond her years starlet felt she was leading audiences to harrowing discussions worth talking about. In an interview with The New York Times, Fanning, at just 12 years old, mused, "There are so many children that this happens to, every second. That's the sad part. If anyone's talking about anything, that's what they should be talking about."
    • Goofs
      The 45 rpm record that Lewellen's father gave her in the truck (supposedly by Elvis on RCA) is apparently a reissue of an original which did not exist at the time.
    • Quotes

      Lewellen: Oh my God, Daddy, guess what! I saw Elvis, and he blew a kiss just for me! Daddy, I saw Elvis!

      Daddy: You left me alone. You said you'd be back.

      Lewellen: I am back.

      Daddy: Well, you said you'd be right back, and you didn't come right back. I thought you were gone.

      Lewellen: I'm sorry.

      Daddy: You won't leave me, will you? Promise you'll stay with me for always. Promise you won't leave me again.

      Lewellen: I promise.

    • Crazy credits
      The film has a 2008 copyright date in the credits, despite first being shown in early 2007.
    • Connections
      Featured in WatchMojo: Top 10 Roles Too Mature for Child Actors (2019)
    • Soundtracks
      Homage to Harry Partch
      Written by Dave Soldier, Richard Lair and The Thai Elephant Orchestra

      Courtesy of Mulatta Records

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    FAQ20

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • January 22, 2007 (Mexico)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Untitled Dakota Fanning Project
    • Filming locations
      • Orton Plantation - 9149 Orton Road SE, Winnabow, North Carolina, USA
    • Production companies
      • Deerjen Films
      • Full Moon Films NY
      • The Motion Picture Group
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $3,750,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $131,961
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $13,744
      • Sep 21, 2008
    • Gross worldwide
      • $131,961
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 38m(98 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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