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In the early 1980s Sam Fuller was enjoying a rebirth of his theatrical directing
career, which had slowed to a crawl after 1964's The Naked Kiss. 1980 brought
the release of The Big Red One, a project with strong personal significance
for the director. Shortly thereafter came the daring White Dog, a full return
to Fuller's hard-hitting journalistic style: loud, bold and to the point.
Fresh from his Paramount hit Airplane!, producer Jon Davison knew that
White Dog had the kind of gut-level attraction favored by the director. Fuller
and writer Curtis Hanson shaped Romain Gary's provocative source story into a
compassionate Lassie Come Home tale -- but with a savage horror angle. Young
actress Julie (Kristy McNichol) runs over a stray German Shepherd in the Hollywood
hills. The dog's recovery period is a bonding experience, and Julie decides to keep
it. But one night the dog returns covered in blood. Later, it attacks one of Julie's
friends. She takes the animal to the show-biz menagerie run by animal trainers
Carruthers and Keys (Burl Ives & Paul Winfield). The men make a shocking discovery:
Julie's animal is a "White Dog," a beast programmed by racists to kill black people.
Keys is obsessed with White Dogs, and determines to break Julie's Shepherd of its
conditioned behavior. When the dog escapes and kills a man, Keys insists on going
forward with his experiment, even though harboring a deadly animal exposes all of
them to legal jeopardy. Can Keys break the dog's attack conditioning? An old dog can
learn new tricks, but can it forget old ones?
Davison says that there was no studio interference with the production. But the NAACP
publicly accused the movie of racism, which may have prompted Paramount's decision to
not release White Dog in America. Sam Fuller was heartbroken, as he felt he'd
made a worthy film with a strong anti-racist statement. The Los Angeles cable TV Z
Channel screened White Dog not long afterward, and then the movie more or
less disappeared.
Paramount was not in the habit of shelving movies with profit potential; it was then
the home of the trashy, lucrative Friday the 13th series. White Dog has
more than enough tension and violence for exploitation purposes; we're forever
wondering who will be the next victim. The very next year, Warners enjoyed a solid
hit with a killer dog movie, Stephen King's horror adaptation Cujo.
White Dog's underlying metaphor is both valid and powerful. We see no black
Americans being mistreated by redneck whites, only the actions of a sinister, lethal
animal. The dog wasn't born with a racial attack trigger; it was beaten into him as a
puppy. White Dog therefore identifies human racism as an infection passed from
adult to child. As the song says in South Pacific, "You've Got to Be
Taught." The direct references to racism are carefully tempered. Keys explains
that white slave owners 200 years ago bred and trained White Dogs to catch escaped
slaves -- and presumably to terrorize slaves considering escape. Julie asks how they
trained dogs to catch escaped white men, and Keyes just frowns. Julie's a nice girl,
but she just doesn't "get it" yet. Keyes' efforts to re-train her dog aren't really
about the dog. He's really hoping to establish that a racist can be re-educated.
Julie's new dog is intensely loyal. It saves Julie from a rapist but also savages the
operator of a street cleaning machine. The dog attacks an African-American actress
working with Julie on a film set (which references a scene from Fuller's The Naked
Kiss). And when the dog escapes from the training compound, we know it will go
for the throat of the first black person it sees. The beast narrowly misses catching
sight of a small black child. Just seconds later, it pursues a victim into a church.
Typical of Fuller, the scene concludes with an in-our-face graphic: a stained glass
window showing Saint Francis of Assisi standing over a peaceful white dog. The dog is
a constant menace, a killer monster.
Sam Fuller appears briefly as Julie's agent, and Christa Lang-Fuller is a
veterinarian urging Julie to have the dog euthanized. Paul Bartel, Marshall Thompson
and Neyle Morrow play filmmakers on the movie set and our old friend Dick Miller is
glimpsed as one of Carruthers' animal trainers.
Criterion's DVD of White Dog is an excellent enhanced transfer that looks much
better than older full-frame presentations. Disc producer Susan Arosteguy has
assembled a fascinating making-of docu built around interviews with producer Davison,
co-writer Curtis Hanson, Christa Lang-Fuller and others. We get the idea that
White Dog was an important project for all of them. Davison becomes emotional
when he laments the film's effect on Sam Fuller's subsequent career.
In a separate interview, trainer and actor Karl Lewis Miller explains his use of
multiple dog actors and his special methods to create the frightening attack
sequences. I don't remember seeing any explanation of special effects for the dog;
it's possible that his snarling muzzle is a makeup trick in some shots. Whatever it
is, it's very disturbing.
A gallery of photos is present, along with an insert booklet containing essays by J.
Hoberman and Armond White. Also included is a novelty "interview with the White Dog"
written by Sam Fuller to publicize and explain his unusual film. An earlier, more
vicious cover art design has been replaced with an image that places the White Dog
against a symbolic white background. Unreasoning hatred permeates our entire culture,
not just the dog.
For more information about White Dog, visit The Criterion Collection.To order White Dog, go to
TCM Shopping.
by Glenn Erickson
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