Film
What's on at the cinema plus reviews of the latest movie and DVD releases
Cave of the Yellow Dog (2005)
Director: Byambasuren Davaa
Movie review
From Time Out London
Mongolian-born, German-trained and financed director Byambasuren Davaa’s follow-up to ‘The Story of the Weeping Camel’ delivers more of the same: a low-key drama-documentary about her country’s nomadic herdspeople with an animal theme and an elliptical title. The drama is slight: little Nansal, eldest daughter of the Batchuluuns, a real nomad family filmed by Davaa and her crew, brings home a stray dog. Her father wants rid of it, worried it’ll bring wolves who’ll decimate his sheep, while the titular myth, about a sick girl healed when her dog is shut away in a cave hardly helps doggy’s case to disprove himself a harbinger of doom. The documentary element captures the Batchuluuns’ disappearing way of life (intimations of approaching modernity abound), but you can’t help feeling that it panders to Western audiences as it lingers on their everyday tasks – chopping wood, making cheese, dismantling yurts, collecting dung – as if they’re all intrinsically fascinating. A straight documentary might have better imparted their plight, while an out-and-out drama might have proved, well, dramatic.Author: Nick Funnell
Time Out London Issue 1871: June 28-July 5 2006
Cast & crew
Director: Byambasuren Davaa
Cast: Urjindorj Batchuluun, Batbayar Batchuluun, Nansal Batchuluun, Buyandulam Daramdadi Barchuluun, Nansalmaa Batchuluun full cast
Genre(s): Drama
Rated: U
Duration: 93 mins
UK Release: Jun 30 2006
Top Stories
Ben Drew aka Plan B interview
The singer, rapper and now film director discusses his debut film 'Ill Manors'
Cannes Film Festival 2012: final round-up
Dave Calhoun draws the curtain on the world's greatest film festival
Ridley Scott interview
Director Ridley Scott tells Cath Clarke why he's making a science fiction comeback







What do you think?
Post your review now