[MOVIE]

MON CHIEN

Cast and Credits

Scen.: Georges Franju, Jacques Prévert (commento). F.: Georges Delaunay, Jean Penzer. M.: Suzanne Sandberg. Mus.: Henri Crolla. Int.: Roger Pigaut (voce narrante), Jacqueline Lemaire (la bambina), il cane Rex. Prod.: Claude Jaeger per Procinex, 35mm. D.: 25’. Bn.

Film notes

Making this movie dragged me down the slippery slope of sentimentality. I regret it. The little girl who loved her dog and was so sorry she’d lost it was extraneous. I failed at what I had previously managed to avoid… On the other hand I chose not to shoot the crucial scene at the dog pound, the gassing. I didn’t want to witness an atrocity like that.

Georges Franju, in M-M Brumagne, Franju. Impressions et aveux, L’Âge d’Homme, Lausanne 1977

 

It is this omission that makes Mon chien the cruelest of all of Franju’s movies, because everything is normal about this journey of a dog condemned to death as soon as its master removes its collar and its name-tag. The very first images betray unease in the heart of bourgeois family life (a house in Paris’ posh 16th arrondissement), with its 1950s artefacts, a car, a highway and a forest for sunny outings, which the camera penetrates in a lengthy tracking shot ending in front of a giant cross. The countryside is not a reassuring place, with its ominous church. “Alas, stray dogs always seek out the protection of human beings”, reports Jacques Prévert’s terse commentary: the dog is as passive as the cattle in Le Sang des bêtes. The viewer is hardly spared anything, except the sight of a gas chamber and a vivisection table. Enunciating their names is enough. The film ends on an empty cage.

Bernard Eisenschitz

Copy sourced from

Restoration credits

by courtesy of Gaumont

Edition 2019
Film version French version
Section Georges Franju: Beyond Reality
Screenings
27 JUNE 2019 [16:30]
Cinema Lumiere – Sala Officinema/Mastroianni