A Dog of Flanders (1960) (NR)
Old-fashioned, sentimental tale of determination.
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- Studio: Paramount Pictures
- Running Time: 96 minutes
- Release Date: 01/01/1960
- Video/DVD Release Date: 09/12/1991
- Genre: Family and Kids
- MPAA Rating: NR
Parents need to know
Families can talk about the tragedy here. Many popular films for kids have sad elements -- like Bambi or Finding Nemo. Why do you think that is? Do kids gain anything from this painful plotting?
Message
Social Behavior:
Consumerism:
Drugs/Alcohol/Tobacco:
Violence
Whipping of dog implied. Windmill blades kill a villainous dog-beater.
Sex
Faint implication that the artist and his model are lovers; her nude back is shown.
Language
Common Sense says
What's the story?
Reviewed by Polly M. Robertus
While struggling with poverty and becoming an artist, a poor orphaned Flemish boy named Nello (David Ladd) rescues and befriends a dog.
Is it any good?
A DOG OF FLANDERS is a fine, though unabashedly sentimental, story of triumph over adversity, but children expecting the dog to play a major role may be disappointed. This earlier version of the classic novel is slightly better than the more recent movie. Ladd, as the young hero of the movie, speaks his lines too carefully, but the rest of the cast, including Theodore Bikel, does a convincing job. It moves slowly, imparting lots of information about 19th-century Flanders and the training and work of an artist, but the material is always interesting and well integrated into the story.
An 11-year-old viewer wondered aloud about the title of A Dog of Flanders when so much of the movie is about Nello's determination to become a painter rather than his rescue of the dog. But she was entirely engrossed in the movie and cried -- hard -- when the grandfather died, leaving Nello and his dog alone and hungry. Although it is slow-paced, this is fine family fare, old-fashioned in its sentimentality and fairly educational.
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