4.5/5
Well, to
begin with a confession. I have been crying for nearly the last half hour.
These have not been tears of frustration on watching yet another jaded
entertainer or difficult to fathom artsy flick. These are tears of gratitude
towards the director of the movie for what is easily the most sensitive and
touching portrayal of the bond between a man and a dog.
Richard
Gere is the music professor at a college who finds an abandoned dog at the
train station. He takes it to his home. His wife (Joan Allen) is initially against
keeping the dog with them because of a reason. But slowly she understands that
her husband had become totally crazy for it and he ends up becoming a part of
their family which also includes a daughter. Gere finds out that its name is
Hachiko.
The film
tracks the relation between Gere and Hachiko over their life time. The
incidents are funny and poignant and you would be laughing as well as
suppressing sniffles.
Gere is in
the acting form of his life and you can clearly see that he loves Hachiko.
Their chemistry burns up the screen and lifts this from a very good movie to a
truly extraordinary one. Allen is better than average as his wife. There are a
bunch of characters that fall in love with Hachiko and they are sketched very
vividly.
But the film
belongs to the titular Hachiko. The director uses black and white to show his
point of view. Watching many scenes I thought I could understand that the
director was trying to show that we may be thinking that our pet is really fine
and cozy in its place but what it actually wants at that time is to be with us,
in our arms. Hachiko wins your heart and bowls you over and devastates you by
the end of the run time.
I have
never owned an animal in my life time. I guess it is time to set this right. As
one of my friend wrote and it has stayed with me ever since, when you go and
select a dog perhaps that may be the only occasion you get to select your
relative.
Unbelievable
achievement.

The movie is unique in more ways than one. It takes more than just being human to understand and execute something so sensitive with such finesse.
ReplyDeletethe director is known for directing heart touching and sensitive movies like "what is wrong with Gilbert Grape" which portrays the mentally challenged in the most realistic manner.He was the perfect man for the job.
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