Year of the Dog

2007 โ€ข 96 เบ™เบฒเบ—เบต
4,0
2 เบ„เบณเบ•เบดเบŠเบปเบก
70%
Tomatometer
เบกเบตเบชเบดเบ”
เป€เบšเบดเปˆเบ‡เปƒเบ™เป‚เบ›เบฃเปเบเบฃเบกเบ—เปˆเบญเบ‡เป€เบงเบฑเบš เบซเบผเบท เบญเบธเบ›เบฐเบเบญเบ™เบ—เบตเปˆเบฎเบญเบ‡เบฎเบฑเบš เบชเบถเบเบชเบฒเป€เบžเบตเปˆเบกเป€เบ•เบตเบก
เบ—เบฑเบ‡เบชเบฝเบ‡ เปเบฅเบฐ เบ„เบณเปเบ›เบšเปเปˆเบกเบตเปƒเบซเป‰เป€เบ›เบฑเบ™เบžเบฒเบชเบฒเบ‚เบญเบ‡เบ—เปˆเบฒเบ™. เบ„เบณเปเบ›เบกเบตเปƒเบซเป‰เป€เบ›เบฑเบ™ เบญเบฑเบ‡เบเบดเบ”.

เบเปˆเบฝเบงเบเบฑเบšเบฎเบนเบšเป€เบ‡เบปเบฒเบ™เบตเป‰

An unremarkable administrative assistant finds her life going to the dogs both literally and figuratively in actor/screenwriter-turned-director Mike White's dark comedy drama. An inexplicably cheerful office worker whose somewhat sad excuse for a life seems to revolve around her pet beagle Pencil, Peggy (Molly Shannon) seems to relate better to her four-legged friend than she does to most humans. Most of her person-to-person interaction revolves around doting on other people's children and treating her co-workers to daily donuts, and Peggy just doesn't find much solace in the company of her know-it-all sister-in-law Bret (Laura Dern) or her anxiety-prone boss Robin (Josh Pais). When Peggy's dog Pencil is taken before his time, the devastated dog-lover is wracked with guilt. Now desperate to fill the gaping void that has suddenly opened in her life, Peggy agrees to a date with her gun-nut neighbor Al (John C. Reilly) that ends in disaster when she begins to suspect that the boorish brute may have in fact poisoned her ill-fated pooch. Later, after adopting every dog at the local pound and transforming herself into an overzealous animal-rights activist, the increasingly unhinged Peggy reaches out to asexual activist Newt (Peter Sarsgaard) in a last-grasp attempt at forming a human connection that is met with casual indifference.

เบเบฒเบ™เบˆเบฑเบ”เบญเบฑเบ™เบ”เบฑเบš เปเบฅเบฐ เบ„เบณเบ•เบดเบŠเบปเบก

4,0
2 เบ„เบณเบ•เบดเบŠเบปเบก