Dogs: Review
But Netflix's Dogs, while packed to the gills with good boys, is about more than the bond with human and pooch.
This six part series, from Deliver Us From Evil's Amy Berg and Glen Zipper, is also about society and the subtleties that live within.
While it starts with the cute, the opening episode treads much of the same lines as recent cinema release Pick of the Litter, in that it tackles service dogs. But whereas the film keeps things fluffy, the doco chooses to go deeper into what the dogs mean to their various charges, in this case young Corinne whose epilepsy means her mum continually sleeps in the same room, but what also their presence does to the rest of the family - hint, it's no family pet (much to the consternation of one sibling whose constant queries over the dog show how she's bonded beforehand).
More powerful I'd wager is the second episode which tells the tale of a Syrian refugee desperate to get his dog Zeus out of there and into Berlin where he now lives. There's much more going on with Dogs than pure cuteness at a surface level.
This tale is pertinent, globally acute and is as much about the refugee cost as a case of reuniting owner with dog.
It's some smart doco making that finds all the deeper facets and avoids the obvious easy routes - and Dogs does it well, with panache and pooches in equal measure.
For animal lovers in the know it's not exactly eye-opening stuff in some ways, but given people will be piqued by the cute pitch (Dogs!), the scope for education on more global issues is an opportunity well worth bingeing on.
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