Red Dog Film Analysis

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They say “sometimes you pick the dog, however sometimes the dog picks you”
The Australian film institute has been seeking recommendations on what Australian film should be included in an international Australian Film festival in late 2016. The inclusion of the film Red Dog should be definite and I am here to persuade you why. Released in 2011, Red dog is the retold story of the Pilbara wanderer. However this wanderer was not a human, he was a Kelpie that touched the hearts of many throughout Western Australia. Director Kriv Stenders has taken the true story of Red Dog and recreated it into a heart jerking film. During the film viewers are exposed to the history,
The film red dog isn’t just a made up story that a director wrote on a sunny day, …show more content…

The theme of mateship is shown throughout the entire film of Red Dog; through the friendships of the Dampier workers, but most significantly shown through the bond that John and Red dog …show more content…

During the scenes that Red dog is travelling the desert looking for John, viewers are able to see a perfect example of what the Australian outback is really like. Dry, vast and scattered with the odd tree, red dog is on the search, he hitchhikes up the whole western side of Australian. During the daytime scenes in Red Dog you see the glaring sun beaming upon the rich Australian soil and you can only imagine how hot it would be if you were actually there. As red dog sits in John’s house waiting for him every day he observes the sunset in the distance, as it disappears behind the rocky road. For international viewers the landscape in the movie red dog clearly represents the Australian outback. The stereotypes throughout red dog, are typical to the average Aussie bloke; Bogan attire, beard, dirty and always with a bear in there hand. The actors use jargon and slang to depict the average conversation between two Australian

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