Upsetting Day: The Wonderful World of Dogs đ
Added 2021-10-14 12:00:04 +0000 UTCWhen I was a kid, my grandmother recorded a documentary for me on VHS about dogs. Grandma didnât know that what she actually recorded wasnât so much a documentary as a bizarre milieu of reenactments, staged scenes and ridiculous personal dog stories - almost exclusively from a town in Australia called Mossman. This documentary is bonker butts. I canât stress that enough. For years I would describe what I only knew from childhood as âthe doggy tapeâ to people and no one believed it actually existed. Iâd say âthereâs a reenactment scene of a pelican kidnapping a chihuahua and the chihuahua plays itself!â While this description was too much for people to believe, the actual scene is much weirder and more beautiful than I could ever convey.
After years of searching, I found it. tHe WOnDerfUl WOrLd oF DOGS.
Itâs a documentary by Mark Lewis. Heâs some sort of deranged animal-based libertarian documentarian judging by his only other documentary, Cane Toads (which is almost as batshit as tWWOD.) Let me tell you, nothing I can say will do this film justice. But seeing as itâs only streaming on one obscure site and costs money, Iâll try my best. (Also, many humans in the film are not introduced by name so Iâll refer to them by their relationship to dogs.)
The most prevalent storytelling methods in The Wonderful World Of Dogs seem to fall into three categories: Interviews with reenactments, staged scenes, and vendettas.
For a non-crime-based documentary, this film sure has a LOT of reenactments. And boy, do they deliver on drama. The best reenactment is the saga of Pebbles, the chihuahua who may or may not have been kidnapped by a pelican. When we first see lil' Pebbles, sheâs expertly extracting and chomping down on the patty from a big mac. Pebbles is a chunky lil' doggie for her exceptionally tiny size. Her eyes are big and round and blank as hell. So cute. Pebblesâ owner looks and sounds like what we Americans think a British nanny looks and sounds like. Said owner lists various human foods Pebbles likes, explaining that her chihuahua probably loves spicy food because sheâs Mexican.
This is when our harrowing story starts. Pebblesâ owner says they were on holiday at a beach when people started warning her not to let the dog down near âthe pelicans.â Her fear is palpable. She claims pelicans have kidnapped and flown away with chihuahuas in the past and we get a glorious close up on Pebbles dubbed with a fearful gulp sound effect. Pebblesâ helicopter mom says of the pelicans, âThey wouldâve taken her, sheâs so little, they wouldâve taken her!â And we fade into a beautiful reenactment. I canât stress enough how well shot this is. Pebblesâ mom and Pebbles play themselves. Thereâs twilight zone-esque royalty free music, a nefarious gang of real pelicans, a pelican puppet CARRYING PEBBLES OVER A BACKDROP OF THE SKY and dropping her on the beach as her owner sobs-- basically everything you could possibly want in a pelican-kidnap-based reenactment. Itâs shot like the most harrowing crime recreation youâd find on Investigation Discovery. You just have to see it. You have to fucking see it. (By the way, itâs not even clear whether or not Pebblesâ mom believes this DID happen or just that it could have happened.)
Other reenactments include (but are not limited to): a British woman who picked wild mushrooms and served them at a dinner party while her dog barked like mad. The dog finally eats the mushrooms and dies to demonstrate the dangers of their food (since the dog is dead it is played by an actor.) The Brits get their stomachs pumped.
Thereâs a reenactment of the time George Bush Srâs staff had two dogs shot on a runway so his plane could land, because of course they did. I know they didnât shoot the dogs in this reenactment. Right? One of them is just playing dead? I only ask because the makers of The Wonderful World of Dogs seem willing to do anything for their art.
Another interview/reenactment features a mailman whose dog-related trauma seems very real. You can feel his fear as he describes these big yard dogs dog-calling him like heâs a piece of meat. Obviously the filmmakers have this poor beleaguered mailman reenact being attacked by a dog. This ends with a close up shot of his glasses falling onto the pavement, a trope most movies save for, like, death. I donât know if the mailman received therapy after this.
Some of the staged scenes in The Wonderful World Of Dogs could also be considered reenactments and/or are part of the two prominent vendettas in the film. So Iâll discuss some of the staged scenes that seem more like filler? Color? I donât know but theyâre glorious. âStreet dogsâ are shooed away by citizens who just happen to be standing there at the right time, yelling PERSONAL INSULTS at the dogs. These âstreet dogsâ are wearing collars. One steals from a butcher shop. Iâve thought about these scenes a lot, because if someone said âIâm going to make a documentary about dogsâ youâd think they were just going to film dogsâ natural behavior. Getting multiple dogs to conform to a storyboard seems like a lot. But Mark Lewis had a vision. He had the dogs. And he had some random Australians stand in the street to yell insults at the dogs.
A bulldog lover whose house is littered with porcelain bulldogs even the kitchiest grandma would find tacky is interviewed with his current bulldog. Sheâs jowly and jittery, the best combination. The dog is constantly trying to jump off his lap and, I think, eat the camera? Her owner explains that his droopy lil' bullsnort loves to attack a particular TV news host and turns it on to demonstrate. The bulldog attacks the TV with lust and vigor the likes of which youâve never seen.
A gentle looking brunette woman explains that her poodle, Kisses, showers with her. She showers with Kisses to demonstrate. She has no qualms about being nude on camera (props to her) but I guess none of the dogs do either.
Also, because itâs the late 80s/early 90s, she has the same hair as her poodle. They use the same shampoo.
They own matching outfits. Nobody let this lady have a daughter! After the shower we are treated to a poodle fashion show.
The bulldog and poodle scenes are more like demonstrations of dog behavior under proper conditions, whereas other staged scenes are definitely just, uh, scenes. Like, scripted scenes, but in a documentary and starring dogs.
For example, a very scripted scene shows a lovely young couple saying âGoodbye! Be good!â to their stubby (Australian cattle dog mix?) doggie before they go out, after which the dog promptly destroys everything and sets fire to the house with Christmas lights.
My favorite staged scene is something else entirely. It involves two large, lean brown dogs fucking over porn music. Itâs dubbed by HUMANS panting and grunting. There are doggie style POV shots just like in real porn. Are we supposed to view this like real porn? How many people were involved in making this? Is it some sort of crime? What did the filmmakers do to get the dogs fucking on camera? Asking questions of a Mark Lewis documentary is pointless, but I do it anyway because I feel dirty. The proper way to watch this film is just to bask in the bizarre. Let it wash over you. Let yourself feel every moment of this filthy fuckfest:
The Wonderful World of Dogs features two prominent vendettas. One is between Mossman City Councilman Screwby and a German Shorthaired Pointer named Fugly. The other is between a woman in Mossman and dog poop. These vendettas are long, drawn out, and filled with way more rage than any of us could expect. In fact, the Saga Of Fugly takes up most of the film. Iâll touch on the finer points of these longstanding grudges, starting with dog poo lady.
A middle aged woman in her very '80s kitchen sits at a typewriter thatâs presumably only been used to write angry letters. Her blue eyeliner matches her blue typewriter which matches her blue shirt and blue porcelain babies. If she believes blue is calming, itâs not working. She smokes a cigarette mournfully and tells a chilling tale about dogs pooping on the city-owned patch of grass in front of her house. Thatâs right, the dogs arenât even pooping on her property. From the lengths sheâs gone to in order to stop them, youâd think the dogs of Mossman spread their floppy doggie buttcheeks and laid a fat poo directly in her mouth.
Some of the methods she says sheâs used to stop dogs pooping on the grass are:
- Calling the city council
- Calling the sanitation department
- Calling the parks department
- Calling the sanitation department again
- Cayenne pepper (she pronounces it canine pepper in some sort of Freudian slip, the dogs have taken her mind, nothing lives there but the dogs.)
- Moth balls
- Turpentine
- Ammonia (how is the grass still alive?)
- Teriyaki sticks in the ground
- Fennel
- Calling the city council again
- Chemical laden water bottles (They work for a bit, but humans destroyed them- Iâm guessing local dogs got sick or something.)
- Asking the city council to let her replace the grass with concrete (they say no.)
This woman also voices over the end credits to complain, once more, about the dog poop.
By far the most prominent story in this film is the saga of Councilman Screwby and Fugly (as far as I could hear, and believe me I kept rewinding to make sure, this IS the dogâs name.)
Fugly is a dog who escapes from his home to roam the town and make friends. Heâs a very friendly brown and white dog whose jowls bounce and collar jingles when he walks. Other than knocking over the occasional trash can, the charges against Fugly seem to just be âroaming without a leashâ which, granted, is dangerous for Fugly himself (despite the mayor of Mossman claiming he saw Fugly press the button to use a crosswalk. Thereâs a staged scene of this because of course there is.)
We see interviews with owners of various shops where Fugly spends his days including a tire shop that hides him when the dog catcher is called (the dog catcher also loves Fugly and regrets caging him on so many occasions).
City councilman Screwby, however, is not pleased. Sitting calmly in his very beige office, it seems like heâs trying to cultivate the image of a reasonable man who does NOT call the dog catcher on a single dog every day. A man who does not troll the streets day and night, looking for his one doggie nemesis. Perhaps he is a reasonable man. Maybe this documentary is biased in Fuglyâs favor. Screwbyâs interviews are so perfectly poised, yet so perfectly insane. Screwby talks about Fugly like he would an actual criminal. Seriously, you have to watch him talk about this dog.
Most glaringly, The Wonderful World of Dogs teaches you ABSOLUTELY NOTHING ABOUT DOGS. Not from a biological standpoint, breeding, training, behavior, rescue, or um, anything. But if nothing else, this film lives up to its name. I canât tell you how wonderful it is to watch this perfectly demented piece of cinema. I tried to tell you. I wrote a whole thing. You just read it. But I canât fully describe it all. You have to watch this shit.
If these images are borked, you can read this article and every other one on the much better in every way 1900HOTDOG.COM.
Comments
The variety of things I learn about her never cease to surprise me...
Matthew Harris
2021-10-16 08:10:04 +0000 UTCFrom what I've seen of pelicans...........yeah they'd eat anything. Doves, rats, small dogs, unattended babies.
Flippant Sausage
2021-10-16 04:57:59 +0000 UTCI guess my brother's dog is just a stickler to keeping to type - when he and his wife were out of town, they had a friend dogsit for them. Said friend let their dog, a basset hound named Maybel, out into the fenced-in backyard, not realizing there was a spot she could slip through if left unattended. So she got out, and my brother got a call from a local veterinarian, who'd found her a mile and a half away, in a grocery store, where she'd eaten three pounds of ground beef right out of a refrigerated display. Sometimes, when I'm feeling down, I like to think about all the shoppers who walked by, saw a dog eating ground meat in a grocery store's ,eat department, and reached over her to grab their own groceries, just minding their own business and letting her live her best life.
Clifford Tunnell
2021-10-15 03:30:43 +0000 UTCThis piece rules. This site continues to be everything I used to enjoy about the internet. Just have to note that Mark Lewis actually has had quite a long career as a documentarian, and all of his work is hyper-specifically animal-focused. I saw his "Natural History of the Chicken" a while back. It is similarly about a bunch of oddballs who really enjoy chickens and also quite a bit of fun. According to IMDb he's also directed "Rat," "Standard of Perfection: Show Cattle," "Standard of Perfection: Show Cats," a sequel called "Cane Toads: Conquest," and something called "Animalicious" that I don't want to learn more about.
IOB
2021-10-15 03:10:13 +0000 UTCWhy did this children's dogumentary have footage of a nude woman? Why did she need to be nude to demonstrate that the dog showers with her? Why did they proceed with filming after she'd gotten nude? What did they tell her they were doing that lead to her doing so? How did it wind up in the final edit? How did it get published? Why did your grandmother give it to you?!
Joshua Graves
2021-10-15 02:44:20 +0000 UTCI want to talk to the camera operator who worked on the dog sex scene. I have questions and concerns.
petertron
2021-10-15 02:24:27 +0000 UTCOK, now I HAVE to watch Cane Toads.
Pablo Rodriguez
2021-10-14 22:40:10 +0000 UTCNo piece of writing has ever thrown me for a loop harder than "(By the way, itâs not even clear whether or not Pebblesâ mom believes this DID happen or just that it could have happened.)" No movie twist has ever been as potent as the possibility that this chihuahua wasn't actually stolen off the beach by an evil bird with a burlap mouth.
Selkie Eve
2021-10-14 20:59:22 +0000 UTCI believed this was real until we got to Screwby. That's a Seanbaby name if I ever heard one.
Matt Edwards
2021-10-14 20:07:01 +0000 UTCAm I not supposed to want to watch "The Wonderful World of Utahns" based on that description?
Matt Edwards
2021-10-14 20:05:54 +0000 UTCGreat. Now I not only have to watch this howling insanity, I have to spend the rest of my life wondering how the Fugly saga eventually ended. Did he get a leash? Did Screwby go insane? Did he resign from office and become dog catcher so he could pursue Fugly full time? Shit. I did not need one more goddamn thing to worry about right now!
Bonnybedlam
2021-10-14 17:46:14 +0000 UTCOr have dogs exist in their proximity? Because I'm pretty sure Screwby and dog poo lady are petless, but they still find a ways to be dicks to dogs.
Vooster
2021-10-14 17:37:39 +0000 UTCI just imagine the dog that knocked over the Christmas Tree barking in victory! "Let it burn, Let it burn!"
DustysRadTitle
2021-10-14 17:36:51 +0000 UTCThe Poxco Store needs "FREE FUGLY" or "ÂÂÂĄVIVA FUGLY!" merch ASAP.
Skebotron
2021-10-14 17:06:03 +0000 UTCClearly, this is anti-dog propaganda funded by Big Cat.
The Parallel Viewmaster
2021-10-14 15:59:32 +0000 UTCThere is literally nothing wonderful about this âworldâ this film presents. Itâs like making a documentary about âThe Wonderful World of Utahnsâ and itâs all dramatizations about how often they get bats caught in their hair, their thriving BDSM scene (shot with paid Californians), and one specific guy in Provoâs hatred for his neighborâs ugly mailbox. This is the opposite of wonderful. It doesnât make me love or hate or be more interested in dogs, it just makes me confused beyond words. Itâs like saying, âLet me tell you how great my parrot has it. What if I told you that he once got shot by a guy who thought he was a government spy? Hereâs a drawing I made to prove it.â Thatâs not interesting or cool, itâs signs of a dangerously disorganized mind.
Stephanie Reinheimer
2021-10-14 15:18:45 +0000 UTCThe Blue Woman has the same haircut as a bad guy in a Conan movie. Ten stars.
Chris âAceâ Hendrix
2021-10-14 14:23:00 +0000 UTCyes i will try to find it and watch may i ask a favor and you guys are gonna think its the opposite but its REAL: Hana Michels could you put the time when that sex scene starts and ends so I CAN SKIP IT even that little clip you posted the shot of the back of her head is VERY upsetting to me and I do not want to carry more of those sort of images in my head
sissyneck
2021-10-14 13:22:37 +0000 UTCmy grandma used to record VHS things for me. She had satellite tv before I did and once when I was little a movie I liked was on one of the movie channels and she let me record it. And because she was grandma she interpreted that as I liked recording and watching movies, which yes,, so for a while before she went to bed she would put in a VHS tape on one of the movie channels hit record and it would record just whatever was playing until it ran out of tape. That's how I watched Cool as Ice, starring Vanilla Ice. found out about Jackie Chan movies, and a lot of Van Damme and Chuck Norris movies, and just whatever else early 90s movie channels had to offer.
DeltaFoxtrot
2021-10-14 12:40:40 +0000 UTC...Some people shouldn't have dogs. Or pets in general.
Talking Alpaca
2021-10-14 12:03:29 +0000 UTC