Asia Travel Guide
Tuesday, October 07th 2008
About Us | Advertising | Contact | Terms of Use
Featured Sites
Asia Posters
Asia Art Prints
Asia Resources
Asia Arts
Asia Entertainment
Asia Business
Asia Culture
Asia Education
Asia Government
Asia Health
Asia Map
Sports & Recreation
Travel & Tourism
Asia Travel Destinations
Afghanistan
Armenia
Azerbaijan
Bangladesh
Bhutan
Brunei
Cambodia
China
Georgia
Hong Kong
India
Indonesia
Japan
Kazakhstan
Kyrgyzstan
Laos
Macau
Malaysia
Maldives
Mongolia
Myanmar
Nepal
North Korea
Pakistan
Philippines
Singapore
South Korea
Sri Lanka
Taiwan
Tajikistan
Thailand
Tibet
Turkmenistan
Uzbekistan
Vietnam
Other Shopping Sites
Retailers Discount
More Shopping Sites

Asia Travel Guide

 



Cave of the Yellow Dog

Cave of the Yellow Dog
Average Customer Rating: Average rating of 4.5/5Average rating of 4.5/5Average rating of 4.5/5Average rating of 4.5/5Average rating of 4.5/5

List Price: $19.95
Asia Trips Trips Price: $17.99
Your Savings: $ 1.96 ( 10% )
Subject To Change Without Notice
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours


Manufacturer: Tartan Video
Starring: Babbayar Batchuluun, Buyandulam Daramdadi, Batchuluun Urjindorj, Nansal Batchuluun, Nansalmaa Batchuluun
Directed By: Byambasuren Davaa

Buy it now at Amazon.com!

Aspect Ratio: 1.66:1
Audience Rating: G (General Audience)
Binding: DVD
EAN: 0842498020296
Format: Closed-captioned
Label: Tartan Video
Manufacturer: Tartan Video
Number Of Items: 1
Publisher: Tartan Video
Region Code: 1
Release Date: 2007-02-13
Running Time: 93
Studio: Tartan Video
Theatrical Release Date: 2005

Related Items

Editorial Reviews:

(Foreign/Drama) Oscar-nominated director Byambasuren Davaa’s follow-up to the hugely successful The Story of the Weeping Camel is a thought-provoking mix of documentary and drama that tells the story of the age-old bond between man and dog. The eldest daughter of a nomadic Mongolian family finds a small dog and brings it home. Believing that it is responsible for attacking his sheep, her father refuses to allow her to keep it. When the family moves on, Nansal must decide whether or not to defy her father and take her new friend with them.


Spotlight customer reviews:

Customer Rating: Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5
Summary: Simple and beautiful.
Comment: "The Cave of the Yellow Dog" is amazing in its simplicity and beauty. It's a perfect example of Neo-Realism, such as even Vittorio de Sica never achieved: director Byambasuren Davaa persuaded an actual nomadic Mongolian family, the Batchuluuns, to star in the film, which essentially was improvised from the details of their daily lives. The basic story is very simple: whether the father of Nansai, the eldest daughter and protagonist, will allow her to keep Zochor (Mongolian for "Spot"), the little dog she finds in a cave. Nansai and Zochor, as Hitchcock might tell you, are the McGuffins; the real story is how the Batchuluuns live in a yurt on the treeless steppes of western Mongolia, tending their sheep, and moving as the weather and the availability of grass and water dictate. Davaa lovingly records the details of the Batchuluuns' life, as they ride shaggy ponies to lead the flocks to grass (Mr. Batchuluun has a motorcycle when he needs to get somewhere in a hurry) and gather dried dung for fires to smoke the meat they need to survive.

Aided greatly by the magnificent camerawork of photographer Daniel Schoenauer--who is equally effective in recording the endless, ever-changing skies above Mongolia and the exquisitely colorful fabrics that decorate the interior of the Batchuluuns' yurt--Davaa presents a quietly compelling portrait of a dying way of life. Nansai spends most of the year in school in Ulan Bator, coming home only for summer vacations, and her little sister and brother will soon follow. Her parents talk about how they might be forced someday to move to the city and get jobs there. Meanwhile, Davaa captures exquisite moments in the Batchuluuns' life. When baby brother plays with the family's porcelain figure of Buddha, his sister upbraids him: "You can't play with God!" As Davaa says in a German-language interview that's an extra on this disc, you can't script a moment like that.

While this in many ways is an ideal film for the whole family, I fear that its slow pace would bore many children, though they certainly would identify with Nansai, the scrapes she gets into, and her love for her family and her little dog. The real audience for "Cave of the Yellow Dog" is for contemplative adults who appreciate pictorial beauty, an exotic and endangered way of life, and the universal appeal of a family whose members love and support each other. The final image of the Batchuluuns moving their herd to new pastures, as a truck drives by blaring a reminder to vote in the next election, is one you won't soon forget.

Customer Rating: Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5
Summary: A Love Story
Comment: A Love Story, you say? What? But to me, that is what this is. A simple story of a child's love for a dog, a mother and father's love for their children, and a dog's love for a little girl. All set in the steppes of Mongolia, where the nomadic life of a family who live off the land seems a dream to me. And the little brother in this movie may very well be the cutest child I've ever seen on screen; indeed all the children are winsome and refreshingly NOT brats. See it if you love a simple family story; safe for children to see and great for adults, too.

Customer Rating: Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5
Summary: A Western Mongolian Family With No Script...
Comment: Picturesque and unbridled, THE CAVE OF THE YELLOW DOG is Mongolian in the extreme. More of a stream of consciousness in terms of style, The Cave of the Yellow Dog's director, Byambasuren Davaa, gives us her second feature length film that has the look and feel of a wayward docudrama but gives us a story that materializes by happenstance (her first being the well-done The Story of the Weeping Camel).

Watching the extra features on the DVD gives one the insights you'll need to understand Ms. Davaa's style of filming. No script. No actors. Just real people doing real lines ...for the most part. The only "story" that weaves its way in is that of the yellow dog and his cave, revealed by an old crone who lives near our Mongolian family's current location.

The family is the Batchuluun family, a husband, wife, a mischievous (and very young) son, a young daughter, and another daughter -- the eldest -- Nansal. It is Nansal who we get to know best as she returns from school in "the city" to her family's nomadic grounds in mountainous western Mongolia. The panoramic shots of the surrounding countryside are achingly beautiful, with fiery sunsets, Grand Canyon-sized valleys, and hillocks of grazing lands mixed with flowering blooms. The topography is often more interesting than the story itself, which meanders hither and thither; from children playing ...to working the farm to finding a not-yellow dog in a nearby cave.

The puppy that Nansal finds is the culmination of what should have been the film's central point. Her obsession over the dog and befriending it causes a rift between Nansal and her father, who doesn't want the dog to attract prowling packs of wolves to their homestead and their goat herd. Nansal loses interest in everything but the pup, even going so far as to not pay attention to the family herd and, eventually, to lose sight of her young brother whom she's supposed to be keeping an eye on. When Nansal stumbles upon an old lady living in a distant yurt, she learns the story of what can happen when someone finds a dog in a cave (although the old lady's story-dog was yellow and Nansal's is black and white ...and named Spot.) ... I won't say anymore, though, for fear of giving away what could be considered the "plot."

Getting back to the extra features...

Director Davaa all but admits that they really had no plan on what to film, just taking it day-by-day and letting the story unfold as it may. So what became an actual plot developed by accident, which I find a bit irritating and refreshing. What if the plot hadn't developed and all we'd gotten were glimpses into the life of a western Mongolian family? I can't help but think that this would've been disastrous for the film. But, thankfully, the story DID come through and we get something unique and pretty darned original.

Customer Rating: Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5
Summary: Tender and Educational
Comment: Cave of the Yellow Dog is a tender movie that also educates about life for the nomadic peoples of Mongolia. I felt I was present with the Mongolian family as they experienced the rigors of life there. The feelings expressed in this movie are common to people around the world, but perhaps keener when living so close to the beauty and natural wonders of Mongolia.

Customer Rating: Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5
Summary: Sweet family fun
Comment: This DVD is appropriate for all ages and gives a glimpse of what life is like in Mongolia. Go to set up and select subtitles in English to understand what is being said. It's refreshing to see what life is like in a society where materialism is not the number one thing that guides their daily activities. Besides purchasing it for ourselves, my husband and I purchased it for 4 married sons and their families.


Buy it now at Amazon.com!


Copyright © 2005-2006 Asia Travel Guide. All rights reserved.
World Travel Destinations
Africa Trips | Asia Trips | Europe Trips | Middle East Trips | Oceania / Australasia Pacific Trips
Central America Trips | North America Trips | South America Trips | Caribbean Trips

Asia Travel Guide
Maintained by: Marketer Solutions
powered by: Amazon Store Manager v2.0 © Stringer Software Solutions