178 My Life as a Dog

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Martha
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178 My Life as a Dog

#1 Post by Martha » Sat Feb 12, 2005 9:14 pm

My Life as a Dog

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My Life as a Dog (Mitt liv som hund) tells the story of Ingemar, a twelve-year-old from a working-class family sent to live with his uncle in a country village when his mother falls ill. There, the boy finds both refuge from his misfortunes and unexpected adventure with the help of the town’s warmhearted eccentrics. Featuring an incredibly mature and unaffected performance from the young Anton Glanzelius, this is a beloved and bittersweet evocation of the struggles and joys of childhood from Oscar-nominated director Lasse Hallström.

Disc Features

- New digital transfer, approved by director Lasse Hallström and enhanced for widescreen televisions
- Shall We Go to Your or My Place or Each Go Home Alone? (1973), a 52-minute film by Lasse Hallström, with a video introduction by the director
- New video interview with Lasse Hallström
- Reflections on My Life as a Dog by Kurt Vonnegut
- Original theatrical trailer
- New and improved English subtitle translation
- Optimal image quality: RSDL dual-layer edition



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Matt
Joined: Tue Nov 02, 2004 12:58 pm

#2 Post by Matt » Mon Aug 08, 2005 12:20 am

Rumsey Taylor's review from Not Coming to a Theater Near You:

[quote]There is an irony at the heart of the “coming of ageâ€

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keeproductions
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#3 Post by keeproductions » Sun Apr 08, 2007 5:12 pm

The title of the film is fleeting in its meaning, although referenced abundantly. In a playful sparring match, Ingemar exhibits his angst with barks and growls. At his former home, Ingemar's dog was as close as a family member. Interpretably, he seems to appreciate the mutt's lack of responsibility and default happiness. There is an incredibly evocative slow-motion chase, late in the film (a flashback), in which the boy chases his dog underneath his mother's bed (the scene includes a shot of her trademark scream). It is a moment that epitomizes the happiness Ingemar has as a child. But it is just that — a moment whose tragic briefness punctuates an existence filled with continual oppression. This scene encapsulates the film; Ingemar longs to age, to confront life with experience, yet he longs to retain the amenities of his childhood. The film represents the point at which such amenities begin to fleet.
It's interesting that this reviewer brings up all sorts of theories on the title of the movie, but doesn't even broach what appears the most obvious to me. Ingemar appears to have a close affinity with the Soviet space dog Laika. Through all of his narration describing those less fortunate than himself, he comes back to Laika again and again. Laika was universally loved, hailed a hero, etc. but in the end was just a end to a means and was left to die when the usefulness was gone and then forgotten. Ingemar certainly feels adrift, unwanted, and many times forgotten.

Obvious stuff, I know. Just surprised it wasn't mentioned above.

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Antoine Doinel
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Re: 178 My Life as a Dog

#4 Post by Antoine Doinel » Wed Mar 25, 2009 6:24 pm

A sequel is set to go in front of cameras next year.

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HistoryProf
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Re: 178 My Life as a Dog

#5 Post by HistoryProf » Mon Apr 13, 2009 1:34 am

a little late...but just saw this on the TCM schedule overnight tonight...followed by Spirit of the Beehive.

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dad1153
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Re: 178 My Life as a Dog

#6 Post by dad1153 » Fri Apr 17, 2009 8:13 pm

Just saw it on TCM (thank you DVR!). I made a common mistake approaching this coming-of-age-in-1959 Swedish movie that it would involve a little boy and his dog. It does (two dogs actually) but in a way that I honestly wasn't expecting and found myself thrilled to experience. As young Ingemar (Anton Glanzelius) learns to deal with personal and family setbacks he experiences ups and downs through interactions with eccentric characters (a bed-ridden old man, a tomboy girl, a soccer-obsessed uncle, a perpetually roof-fixing old man neighbor, etc.) and self-made comparisons to other people/animals that he estimates are having it worse than he. It's a defense mechanism against the inattetion from a sick mother too self-absorbed in her books to provide genuine love to Ingemar, brought to life near the end of the movie in a pitch-perfect slo-mo shot so masterful it blew my mind away. As someone mostly familiar with Hallström's work as director of ABBA music videos ("What's Eating Gilbert Grape" is his only American movie I've seen) this film came as something of a revelation. Despite having too much sexual content for my taste (women, old and young, practically throw themselves at Ingemar's feet in all manner of suggestive states of undress), ponderous voice-overs (no kid talks the way Irgeman does to himself here) and a rather-clumsy historical footnote in Sweedish sports history as its ending (!) "My Life As A Dog" is anything but its namesake. Looking forward to the sequel, which means an inevitable return of the 24 year-old prequel to art house theaters as well as a re-issued (remastered?) DVD. 8-)

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HistoryProf
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Re: 178 My Life as a Dog

#7 Post by HistoryProf » Thu Apr 08, 2010 12:19 pm

on Amazon, they use a review by Miles Anthony in the product description that closes with:
This was later rewritten, whether intentionally or not, by Spike Lee, who changed the gender of the child, set the story in New York City, added a 1970s soul soundtrack, and called it Crooklyn

Can anyone comment on this? it struck me as, well, odd. Is there a real connection here, or was he just trying to go Armond on Spike?

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HistoryProf
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#8 Post by HistoryProf » Mon May 31, 2010 8:51 pm

keeproductions wrote:
The title of the film is fleeting in its meaning, although referenced abundantly. In a playful sparring match, Ingemar exhibits his angst with barks and growls. At his former home, Ingemar's dog was as close as a family member. Interpretably, he seems to appreciate the mutt's lack of responsibility and default happiness. There is an incredibly evocative slow-motion chase, late in the film (a flashback), in which the boy chases his dog underneath his mother's bed (the scene includes a shot of her trademark scream). It is a moment that epitomizes the happiness Ingemar has as a child. But it is just that — a moment whose tragic briefness punctuates an existence filled with continual oppression. This scene encapsulates the film; Ingemar longs to age, to confront life with experience, yet he longs to retain the amenities of his childhood. The film represents the point at which such amenities begin to fleet.
It's interesting that this reviewer brings up all sorts of theories on the title of the movie, but doesn't even broach what appears the most obvious to me. Ingemar appears to have a close affinity with the Soviet space dog Laika. Through all of his narration describing those less fortunate than himself, he comes back to Laika again and again. Laika was universally loved, hailed a hero, etc. but in the end was just a end to a means and was left to die when the usefulness was gone and then forgotten. Ingemar certainly feels adrift, unwanted, and many times forgotten.

Obvious stuff, I know. Just surprised it wasn't mentioned above.

I finally watched this last night, and am absolutely amazed at how badly whoever that was missed the point of the movie! First, it is a lovely film, and I enjoyed it immensely. But of course Ingemar identifies with Laika and Sickan! Both are sent off and killed by humans at their own whims, while he copes with being sent away multiple times by a mother he loves and longs for attention from...and feels guilty for contributing to her illness and eventual passing. Just like the dogs, he feels cast off, presumably to be put down once he outlives his usefulness or gets too annoying. His response to accepting Sicken's fate isn't to cry for the pet, but to despair at his own abandonment and being left in the "kennel" of his uncle's home - where he has even been cast out to share a bed with an elderly widower every night!!

As for the flashback, he again COMPLETELY misses the point....it was a moment of immense sadness, of his attachments to Sickan, and epitomizes the constant difficulties in the home with mom. Indeed, it's so obvious that i'd really like to know who that reviewer is so I make sure to never ever read anything by him ever again. I'm also curious as to what "Interpretably" is supposed to mean ;)

Finally, I also couldn't help but wonder how the U.S. ratings board would have demanded Hallström's arrest for child pornography for showing a pubescent girl's breasts. It's such a perfectly composed scene of adolescent curiosity mingled with embarrassment and overwhelming fear and anxiety. There's nothing remotely titillating about it, but of course American censors would have an aneurysm were it attempted now...It saddens me that it couldn't be made today - thanks Chris Hanson!

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colinr0380
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Re: 178 My Life as a Dog

#9 Post by colinr0380 » Wed Jun 15, 2011 2:48 pm


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Tom Hagen
Joined: Mon Apr 14, 2008 12:35 pm
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Re: 178 My Life as a Dog

#10 Post by Tom Hagen » Wed Jun 15, 2011 4:09 pm

colinr0380 wrote:Blu reissue announced
The monthly Sweetie-memorial, "huh, didn't see that one coming," Blu upgrade.

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colinr0380
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Re: 178 My Life as a Dog

#11 Post by colinr0380 » Tue Sep 06, 2011 3:12 pm


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knives
Joined: Sat Sep 06, 2008 6:49 pm

Re: 178 My Life as a Dog

#12 Post by knives » Wed Aug 31, 2016 9:21 pm

Did anything ever come of that sequel mentioned higher in the thread?

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