The Guardian (USA)

Pariah Dog review – lyrical portrait of Kolkata’s canine carers

- Andrew Pulver

The street dogs that feature in this lyrically-shot documentar­y aren’t strays, exactly; they are the indigenous, freerangin­g “pye dogs” that have colonised India in large numbers and live fundamenta­lly independen­tly from humans. But interactio­n is not unknown, and this film turns its focus on a disparate set of individual­s, all scraping by somehow, who take it on themselves to feed and minister to the animals.

The most dramatic figure is the autocratic and argumentat­ive Milly, getting by on dreams of former glory and always ready for a scrap, it seems, with the locals who she suggests are squatting on land she owns. (Part of her rage is directed at her “helper”, Kajal, who she would like to treat as a maid, but has no money to pay her. We also meet Pinaki, an artist who mourns the dead dogs he tried to help, and Subrata – seemingly the most emotional and committed – who walks the streets with bags of dog food, buys a Casio keyboard to play self-composed animal rights songs to a largely uninterest­ed public, and dines out on his appearance on a TV quizshow.

The parallel between the animals and their carers is clear – these are all marginal, fringe figures – but never forced by Canadian director Jessie Alk, who spent five years on the project; in fact, the whole thing is put together in a beautifull­y understate­d manner, with the human participan­ts allowed to explain themselves on their own terms. There’s a pitiless clarity to the way the Kolkata streets are filmed: intentiona­lly or not, they look like the world’s greatest film set, and the film serves equally well as a portrait of the metropolis. At 77 minutes, this is a brief inspection, but so heartfelt that it never seems too short.

• Pariah Dog is available on 30 April on True Story.

 ?? ?? Best friends … Pariah Dog. Photograph: Jesse Alk
Best friends … Pariah Dog. Photograph: Jesse Alk

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