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Black Dog

Original title: Gouzhen
  • 2024
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 56m
IMDb RATING
7.2/10
4.1K
YOUR RATING
POPULARITY
3,963
1,432
Eddie Peng in Black Dog (2024)
After his release from prison, Lang returns to his hometown near the Gobi Desert, where he forms an unexpected bond with a stray black dog. Both outcasts, they embark on a transformative journey together.
Play trailer1:42
1 Video
25 Photos
Coming-of-AgeDramaThriller

Released from jail, Lang returns to his hometown in Northwest China. As part of a dog patrol tasked with clearing stray dogs before the 2008 Olympics, he bonds with a black stray. The two lo... Read allReleased from jail, Lang returns to his hometown in Northwest China. As part of a dog patrol tasked with clearing stray dogs before the 2008 Olympics, he bonds with a black stray. The two lonely souls embark on a new journey together.Released from jail, Lang returns to his hometown in Northwest China. As part of a dog patrol tasked with clearing stray dogs before the 2008 Olympics, he bonds with a black stray. The two lonely souls embark on a new journey together.

  • Director
    • Guan Hu
  • Writers
    • Guan Hu
    • Rui Ge
    • Bing Wu
  • Stars
    • Eddie Peng
    • Liya Tong
    • Jia Zhang-ke
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.2/10
    4.1K
    YOUR RATING
    POPULARITY
    3,963
    1,432
    • Director
      • Guan Hu
    • Writers
      • Guan Hu
      • Rui Ge
      • Bing Wu
    • Stars
      • Eddie Peng
      • Liya Tong
      • Jia Zhang-ke
    • 15User reviews
    • 63Critic reviews
    • 78Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 17 wins & 22 nominations total

    Videos1

    Black Dog | Official Trailer HD
    Trailer 1:42
    Black Dog | Official Trailer HD

    Photos24

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    Top cast27

    Edit
    Eddie Peng
    Eddie Peng
    • Lang Yonghui
    Liya Tong
    Liya Tong
    • Grape
    Jia Zhang-ke
    Jia Zhang-ke
    • Uncle Yao
    You Zhou
    • Nie
    Xiaoguang Hu
    • Butcher Hu
    Ben Niu
    • Mr. Camel
    Yuanzhang Yin
    • Noodle Restaurant Owner
    Li Zhang
    • Yang Da
    Hongzhe Mo-Tu
    • Yang Er
    You Wu
    • Patrol Squad Deputy
    Youwei Da
    • Greenie
    Chu Bu Hua Jie
    • Melonhead
    Naixun Wang
    • Fluffy
    Yi Zhang
    Yi Zhang
    • Manager
    Hong Yuan
    Hong Yuan
    • Zhao
    Wei Chen
    • Bank Teller
    Yi Zhao
    • Lunatic
    Jianya Zhang
    • Master Qu
    • Director
      • Guan Hu
    • Writers
      • Guan Hu
      • Rui Ge
      • Bing Wu
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews15

    7.24.1K
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    Featured reviews

    7athanasiosze

    6.8/10. Recommended.

    It's a good movie and i wish i would have liked it more and rated it higher. It's so well directed that made me somewhat enjoy it even though nothing significant was happening, specifically during the first 50 minutes. The parallelism between the leading character and this dog was spot-on, the development of their "relationship" as well.

    But still, there are some big flaws. First of all, its running time. It should have been at least 15 minutes shorter. I said i enjoyed it but it was too uneventful at some point. I love poetic and minimalist movies but not like this. Story is almost beautiful but simple, there was no reason to stretch it out so much. Ok, it was beautifully shot but after all, it was mostly an urban landscape.

    And as another reviewer already mentioned, at times "The plot felt aimless". I didn't understand the entirety of what happened in this movie. Random things kept happening without promoting the story.

    However, despite its flaws, this is a good and ambitious movie, well directed as i said but well acted too. The leading character was silent but as a viewer, i understood him, i felt his alienation, his quite desperation and his bond with this dog, the whole thing was touching and natural, not for a moment it felt fake. There were some gorgeous scenes, a great soundtrack with Pink Floyd's songs which were used so effective. And the ending was powerful.

    A meditative movie which could have been so much better.
    MovieIQTest

    If I have to tell you the truth...

    This movie is not what I have expected. I was forced to sit through it with a very uninteresting viewing experience. The screen play is quite boring, loosely knitted together with no energy, no steam at all, but just a lifeless narration. What we saw in this movie is a dying town in the northern China, the livelihood is totally gone after the mining business died. What left is a pathetic town with so many ruined and empty buildings, just like what we saw in Flint, Indiana. The leading character, the protagonist as movie critics or veteran reviewers used to describe, Peng, seems to be an bad choice for such ex-con character, a complete out-of-the-place actor to play this role. His dialogue in this movie is minimum in order to portray that this guy is a loner who belongs to nowhere, even in prison, albeit his so-called hometown. There is not much to tell in this movie, and I really failed to see how the director of this movie would have won some nominations as the best director. Maybe less is more is the current trendy. Making a black stray dog as the co-acting role is just not interested enough to stimulate my urge that would give me any passion or empanthy to the whole storyline. I felt quite impatient when I watched this movie. All of the characters who appeared in this movie, those folks, young or old, cops or civilians who tried to get by in a dying town are interested enough, just like their boring dialogue to each other, to the leading role who looked more like a half dumb or deaf person. If a town is dying, if all the town folks are poor, if all of them lose hope, if their daily lives are all so boring, what would enable to make a movie interesting? Even you put a seasoned actor like Peng to play the leading character, how much he could possibly make this boring town with so many boring town folks become a bit more interesting? A spiritless young man and a black stray dog is as boring as Hemingway's "The Old Man and The Sea", other than somewhat literary values that usually was glorified as "Literature". Trying to tell you that "Black Dog" has certain philosophic depth is just a pretentious view that tries to look deep. How could you get anything out of nothing?
    9peter0969

    Beautiful Man/Dog Relationship Movie

    A beautiful, slow-burn, and memorizing tale of the grim environment of the rural parts of China with strong performances, direction, writing, and structure. Filmmaker Guan Hu achieves with exploring the relationship between man and dog from a Chinese perspective and filled with gorgeous camerawork, sound designs, and interesting narrative choices, it brings out the realism, engagement, and examination of the characters in a nature way.

    With little dialogue, the sobering approach, art-house pacing, and style really brings the narrative into a whole new light. The performances from Eddie Peng and the rest of the cast are great and many of the characters, while some characters could have been explored a little better. I appreciate the movie on exploring about dogs, humanism and society without a biased approach and crafting something that is unique.

    Having won the Un Certain Regard prize, I can see why.
    7CinemaSerf

    Black Dog

    "Lang" (Eddie Peng) has returned to his hometown after a term in prison. We learn a little more about the causes of that and of his distant relationship with his zoo-keeping father as the story develops, as well as discovering that he once was one of the place's more famous citizens being in a popular local band. With the Beijing Olympiad (2008) looming large, there is quite an emphasis for the government on tarting the place up - and that signals quite significant "improvements" for their home on the edge of the Gobi desert. Much of it has already been earmarked for demolition, and with most of the heart (and soul) of the place already removed, the authorities turn their attention to the serious problem of hundreds of feral dogs marauding around potentially spreading rabies. There is one particularly skinny black one that is worth 1000 Yuan if it can be caught, and that's the target for the motor-cycling "Lang". Thing is, this mutt is no mug, and is soon doing more of the chasing (and biting). One particularly embarrassing nibble sees both confined to his home in quarantine and that's when the bonds begin to become established and we also realise the extent of hostility felt by some to this man. With the bulldozers never far away, his ailing dad's zoo no longer able to care for it's tenants and the vengeful butcher "Hu" (Hu Xiaoguang) and his thugs out for revenge, we settle into a tale of this newfound friendship that's quite engaging. It's predictable in stages, but it's really the largely dialogue-free effort from Peng set against a backdrop of relentless winds, dust and trains rolling through the increasingly lifeless town that gives this a bit of potency. It's not so much that the town is being cleared because of the Olympics, though that's clearly on director Hu Guan's mind, it's that why was a town ever here in this inhospitable place in the place? It's bleak and forlorn, a concrete oasis in the middle of nowhere and that setting works well as the man himself comes across as lonely, detached as well as emotionally and physically rootless. It's a slow watch, but not one that drags, for two hours and it rather effectively sums up an existence of mundanity, lack of opportunity and a desire for a true sense of freedom quite well. Be warned, not a great deal happens - but I did enjoy it.
    8tiagodcarneiro

    "Leave if you like. Fall in love if you can. The circus goes on, with or without you. May fate bring us together again."

    A minibus is heading for a small, desolate town on the edge of the Gobi desert. A pack of stray dogs charges towards it, scaring the driver and tipping over the bus. Out of it comes Lang, an ex-convict who used to be a popular stunt motorcyclist, now returning to his hometown after 10 years in prison for the murder of a local gangster's nephew. A few conversations with the police later, the title card appears, and the magic of Black Dog begins. A poetic and minimalist film of healing and moving on, portrayed through a friendship, a bond, a spiritual connection between man and dog. The man is Lang, and the dog is the infamous thin black dog that has been terrorizing the town. Rumored of carrying rabies, the black dog goes around defending his territory by pissing on walls and biting people, so everyone is out to catch him.

    Black Dog is a story of two lonely strays caged by a world that does not understand them. Two lost souls alienated by the society around them. Two black sheep who do not fit in. Lang is marginalized because of his past as a "murderer", and the black dog is also alienated amongst the other strays for being the biggest, strongest, fastest and most aggressive of all the dogs. One of Guan Hu's main messages in Black Dog is that no animal is evil. Humans can be, but dogs cannot. Stray dogs are violent because they're in constant fear, trying to survive in an evolving environment where they do not belong. Lang is similar to a stray dog. He's not like the others. He only says a few words in the whole film as he's very quiet and introverted. Like the black dog, he's trying to make a life for himself in a town that's in the process of modernization. After his time in prison, Lang has changed, and so did the town and the people he once knew. So now, he doesn't speak, he only exists and goes with the flow. That's why Lang and the black dog are so perfect for each other and why they instantly connected-they're both just trying to survive in a world they no longer know, a world that no longer wants them.

    Black Dog is set during an important time for China, a time of urbanization and change. And this little town is impacted deeply. Most of its residents have fled, leaving their dogs behind, who now roam free in the streets and in the desert hills. The zoo is running out of money to sustain the animals, so they too are freed in the desert. The circus is trying to survive, but business hasn't been good. The old is being demolished to make way for the new, which is a clever pararell with the ending of the film, where the black dog dies but leaves behind a new generation of black puppies. The cinematography of Black Dog is gorgeous, with Guan Hu adopting the new "slow-cinema" Chinese style of Bi Gan, which made me fall in love with the film almost instantly. Long, panoramic shots of beautiful landscapes, quiet scenes of motorcycle rides and slow walks through dusty roads and desolate rural villages, are all complemented with a lonesome atmosphere.

    Scenes like Lang and the black dog calmly passing through the desert's stray dogs, and the solar eclipse sequence with the zoo's tiger wandering the town's streets freely, are two of my favorite of the entire year so far. And the final shot of Black Dog is so beautiful and meaningful. Through his canine companion, Lang finally learns how to keep on living despite his dark past, and how to find happiness within life's miseries. The Pink Floyd soundtrack gives a certain nostalgia to Guan Hu's relaxing images, and the acting performances are absolutely stellar, human and animal alike, from Eddie Peng to the black dog named Xiao Xin, and the majestic tiger. Just the fact that Eddie Peng developed such a strong bond with Xiao Xin while filming that he felt he had to adopt him afterwards, is a beautiful real-life illustration of the message of this wonderful film. A melancholic and meditative journey of finding your place in the world through friendship, and a genuine tribute to man's best friend, Black Dog is simply one of the best films of the year, and proof that Chinese arthouse cinema is still very much alive.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Eddie Peng [the lead] established such a strong bond with Xin, the dog featured in the film, that he adopted him after filming had wrapped.
    • Connections
      Referenced in Close-Up: The Best Films and Other Results of 2024 (2024)
    • Soundtracks
      Mother
      Written by Roger Waters

      Performed by Pink Floyd

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • March 5, 2025 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • China
    • Official site
      • Trinity CineAsia (United Kingdom)
    • Language
      • Mandarin
    • Also known as
      • 狗陣
    • Filming locations
      • Gobi Desert, China
    • Production companies
      • The Seventh Art Pictures
      • Huayi Brothers Pictures
      • Momo Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Gross worldwide
      • $2,320,178
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 56 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Atmos
      • D-Cinema 48kHz 5.1
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.47 :1

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