RE: Plague Dogs
Ben wrote:
There's also the question of which cut you're referring to. The truncated US version loses almost 20 minutes of material in a futile attempt to make it a more "family film" solely based on the fact that it was animated and they believed they could go after that audience. The original, much more darker and adult cut, hasn't really been seen since apart from the release in Australia of Rosen's own print, sadly worn.
Lot to comment on, but wanted to slightly argue on this point of the extended version making it darker.
What the longer version ads both makes the film darker in its realism, both also makes the characters more sympathetic and actually allows us to soak up a bit of the characters enjoyment of freedom before things start going very badly. I think this is critical because we must understand why what the characters are doing IS better than captivity. There's some really powerful animation that was edited which accentuates both the innocence of Ralph and Snitter while also capturing the beauty of nature.
The single thing that makes it darker is the of course the issue with what happened to the sniper--you must read between the lines to catch it in the edit, where here you actually see it!
So I don't get what the edits accomplish; but regardless of their failure, they are criminal because of what they do to the final minute of the film; both obliterating Ralph's last line (and obscuring his character transformation), while also speeding up the entrance of the title song. In the original version, there is a space of time after Ralph's final lines and the end credits. We hear the roar of the ocean and in this space the director succeeds in focusing all the thoughts and emotions we've experienced in this film; and only after the whole has sunk in, we hear the first lines of the 'time and tide' song kick in. It is incredibly masterful.
Sorry for resurrecting all this stuff on Plague Dogs, but it isn't just one of my favorite animated films; its one of my favorite films of all times, and I don't need much impetuous to start rambling on about it.