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    Home Page > Movies & DVD > Cane mangia cane

    CANE MANGIA CANE

    69. Festival del Cinema di Cannes (11-22 Maggio 2016) - Film di chiusura della sezione 'Quinzaine des realisateurs' - PREVIEW in ENGLISH by PETER DEBRUGE (www.variety.com) - Dal 13 Luglio

    (Dog Eat Dog; USA 2016; Action Thriller; 93'; Produz.: Blue Budgie Films Limited/Pure Dopamine; Distribuz.: Microcinema per Minerva Pictures)

    Locandina italiana Cane mangia cane

    Rating by
    Celluloid Portraits:



    See SYNOPSIS

    Titolo in italiano: Cane mangia cane

    Titolo in lingua originale: Dog Eat Dog

    Anno di produzione: 2016

    Anno di uscita: 2017

    Regia: Paul Schrader

    Sceneggiatura: Paul Schrader e Matthew Wilder

    Soggetto: Il film si ispira al romanzo omonimo di Edward Bunker, campione di vendite in tutto il mondo.

    Cast: Nicolas Cage (Troy Cameron)
    Willem Dafoe (Mad Dog)
    Christopher Matthew Cook (Diesel Carson)
    Omar J. Dorsey (Moon Man)
    Louisa Krause (Zoe)
    Melissa Bolona (Lina)
    Reynaldo Gallegos (Chepe)
    Chelcie Lynn (Sheila)
    Bruce Reizen (Maurie)
    Jeff Hilliard (Gun)
    Ali Wasdovich (Melissa)
    Louis Perez (Mike Brennan)
    Magi Avila (Tata)
    Paul Schrader (El Greco)
    Nicky Whelan (Daniece)
    Cast completo

    Musica: Nicci Kasper e Deantoni Parks

    Costumi: Olga Mill

    Scenografia: Grace Yun

    Fotografia: Alexander Dynan

    Montaggio: Ben Rodriguez Jr.

    Effetti Speciali: Yevgen Skorobogatko (supervisore effetti visivi)

    Makeup: Francesca Tampieri (direttrice), Lauren Thomas (per Nicolas Cage)

    Casting: Kim Coleman

    Scheda film aggiornata al: 17 Gennaio 2025

    Sinossi:

    Il film narra la vicenda di tre uomini molto diversi tra loro che, appena usciti dal carcere, devono riadattarsi alla vita civile. Sono Troy (Cage), che è alla ricerca di una vita semplice e lontana dal crimine, Diesel (Christopher Mattew Cook), che è sul libro nero della mafia e Mad Dog (Defoe), che animato da una vera e propria vocazione sanguinaria, è il piÚ folle e criminale. I tre si trovano immischiati in un rapimento importante: è l'ultimo colpo, quello definitivo. Ma le cose non vanno come devono andare e si ritrovano di nuovo in fuga tra sparatorie, violenze e suspence, per evitare la prigione e ricostruire le loro vite.

    SYNOPSIS:

    Carved from a lifetime of experience that runs the gamut from incarceration to liberation, Dog Eat Dog is the story of three men who are all out of prison and now have the task of adapting themselves to civilian life. The California three strikes law looms over them, but what the hell, they're going to do it, and they're going to do it their way. Troy, an aloof mastermind, seeks an uncomplicated, clean life but cannot get away from his hatred for the system. Diesel is on the mob's payroll and his interest in his suburban home and his nagging wife is waning. The loose cannon of the trio, Mad Dog, is possessed by true demons within, which lead him from one situation to the next. One more hit, one more jackpot, and they'll all be satisfied. Troy constructs the perfect crime and they pull it off, but in the aftermath, they keep finding the law surrounding them wherever they go.

    Commento critico (a cura di PETER DEBRUGE, www.variety.com)

    Paul Schrader seems so intent on ignoring overused genre-movie conventions that he ignores what would have made this pulp crimer effective.

    They say prostitution is the world’s oldest profession, but that’s only because crime doesn’t pay, or else robbers, murderers and thieves would surely come first. Their exploits have been the stuff of cinema since the medium’s earliest days, to the extent that the crime genre has become all but calcified — which surely explains why director Paul Schrader goes so far out of his way to break all the rules with “Dog Eat Dog.” Coming off the indignity of having “Dying of the Light” taken away from him, the “Taxi Driver” screenwriter-turned-director seems determined to try out some new tricks. He means for the result to feel fresh and electric, but instead, his anarchic approach (one could even call it “criminal,” considering how it deliberately disobeys genre laws)

    frequently verges on incompetent, as most of the time, rejecting the obvious choice leads to choosing a worse one.

    Had the experiment worked, “Dog Eat Dog” might have been the next “Natural Born Killers” — a cracked-out postmodern romp whose delinquent antiheroes see themselves as the stars of the ultimate bandits-on-the-run movie. Adapted from a novel from a real-life criminal, Edward Bunker, the film begins with a guy named Mad Dog (Willem Dafoe) watching television and ends with ex-con pal Tony (Nicolas Cage) playing Humphrey Bogart in his own hail-of-gunfire “Bonnie and Clyde”-style ending. In between, they enlist another friend they met in the slammer, Diesel (Christopher Matthew Cook), to assist with what should be a relatively straightforward kidnapping.

    They’re supposed to steal a baby from a guy named Brennan who’s been holding out millions from a local Cleveland crime boss. But Mad Dog has an itchy trigger finger (“Let me waste

    a couple,” he begs during an earlier hold-up), and some goon’s brains end up splattered all over the baby’s nursery. The movie never even bothers to reveal what becomes of the baby, which may or may not be screenwriter Matthew Wilder’s fault, since Schrader seemed to approach it as little more than the framework on which the cast and crew (nearly all of them hungry young talents a bit too eager to prove themselves) might improvise.

    Following the film’s closing-night premiere in Directors’ Fortnight at the Cannes Film Festival, Schrader explained his strategy: “Don’t be boring.” But that doesn’t really qualify as a valid piece of direction. In fact, it’s practically the opposite, allowing a certain kind of creative anarchy to hijack the proceedings — which otherwise feel like a quarter-century-late Scorsese or Tarantino rip-off. Consider the vaguely pop-culture conversation set in the front of Moon Man’s sedan, in which the

    drug dealer gripes about how his lazy girlfriend has let her Beyoncé curves go, essentially time before the trio (hilariously disguised as Cleveland’s least convincing cops in one of the film’s better gags) pull him over. He may as well be debating the implications of a foot massage, a la “Pulp Fiction,” only the dialogue isn’t nearly as interesting, and even with the police car visible through the rear window, the suspense is practically non-existent.

    That’s not to say “Dog Eat Dog” is bereft of interesting choices. Far from it, though its infrequent bursts of gonzo brilliance are all in service of such an uninteresting premise. Of course things will go sour, and Tony, Diesel and Mad Dog will eventually start to betray one another, but it’s hard to feel all that invested when the characters feel so inauthentic to begin with. Basically, they’re stereotypes on whom Cage, Cook and Dafoe

    are free to doodle — the perfect example of how each eccentrically approaches his own character being a montage in which they take their earnings back to a casino-hotel and try to score with whatever women they can find.

    Those hoping for another unhinged performance from Cage (a la “Bad Lieutenant: Port of Call” or “The Rock”) can take some pleasure in his late-movie Bogart impression, though it’s nothing compared to the drug-addled outburst Dafoe delivers in the movie’s opening scene (one that earns him his Mad Dog nickname, while displaying none of the soul he brought to Schrader’s criminally under-seen “Light Sleeper”). In fact, that sociopathic prologue — in which Mad Dog bathes his heavyset girlfriend’s kitschy pink walls red with blood, while her bobble-head collection looks on in horror — makes it hard to ever come around to feeling for these characters, but at least it clues audiences into

    what kind of madness lies in store (even if nothing that follows ever comes close).

    Shooting his first feature, cinematographer Alexander Dynan experiments with his widescreen compositions, often racking focus mid-shot, and using mirrors and neon to create visual interest. But the relentless attempt to never be boring can only do so much for a piece of material that rarely feels more than boilerplate.

    Even the cred of working from a book by an author who was himself a criminal, and therefore knew of what he wrote, doesn’t translate in film that wears its own hyper-stylized phoniness so brazenly on its sleeve. There are scenes projected in black-and-white, and others lit like they belong in a Nicolas Winding Refn movie. Like the criminals, who don’t have even so much as a code among thieves to abide by, Schrader’s choices nearly all seem to be arbitrary. Instead of coming off as veterans who

    know what they’re doing, the result feels dangerously amateur.

    Pressbook:

    PRESSBOOK ITALIANO di CANE MANGIA CANE

    Links:

    • Paul Schrader (Regista)

    • Nicolas Cage

    • Willem Dafoe

    • Nicky Whelan

    1 | 2 | 3

    Galleria Video:

    Cane mangia cane - trailer

    Cane mangia cane - trailer (V.O.) - Dog Eat Dog

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