Inja (2002) Poster

(2002)

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8/10
The poor kid would have dealt with the ordeal with the dog a lot better had he read Call of the Wild.
Anonymous_Maxine8 March 2005
Then again, of course, the whole point was that he was a poor black kid, pretty much a slave to the rich white man who doesn't exactly prepare him for the University. I just couldn't help remember how vicious the beatings were that the sled dogs suffered in that book. The story focuses initially on a rich white man who takes a puppy away from a young boy, puts the dog into a burlap sack and proceeds to kick him viciously, because "the dog must learn." There is some room for individual interpretation of that statement, but the overwhelming fact is that the man forces the boy to open the sack to let the dog out, and the boy worries because he knows that the dog will think that it was him doing the kicking.

It's difficult to say whether this technique was more to subordinate the boy or to turn the puppy into a working dog that will be useful on the farm as well as useful as a watchdog when it grows into a full sized dog, but I get the feeling that they are both the goals of this repulsive practice.

The film transcends the rather limited and immediate lesson of the dangers of abusing those under you and comes off to me as more of a life lesson of the extended effects that your actions can have. This process of claiming and maintaining power over the boy and the dog combined to cost the man his life and the boy his best friend.

It's odd that the tagline listed on the IMDb says that ultimately both of their lives hang in the balance at the mercy of the dog, because other than not being able to get his master's medicine to him, his life was really not in any danger. I guess he was his master, anyway. But the only way the boy's life was in danger was if he depended on the man to the point where the man's death would mean he was going to starve to death. The dog thought he was protecting his master and would not have attacked the boy unless he tried to approach the man.

This is a pretty powerful film, and while I think the message itself is not exactly lightning out of a clear sky for unexpectedness, it is delivered with a richness and clarity that should be praised, especially in such a short film.
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7/10
Commendable effort
MovieAddict201618 January 2006
Warning: Spoilers
This was nominated in the Best Foreign Picture category of the Oscars for 2001. I don't think it's great, but it is quite good. A nasty white slave owner forces an African boy into putting a young puppy in a bag. He then kicks the bag, and forces the African boy to open the bag, so that the dog will never trust the slaves again.

At the end of the movie, the slave boy witnesses the owner dying of a heart attack. He is going to fetch pills, but the dog gets in his way, defending the master. The boy has to choose whether to save his own life or risk it to save the old man.

Sad? Yes. The ending in particular. But if you can manage to sit through the scene of intense animal cruelty (of course it wasn't real, it's the most realistic-LOOKING beating I've ever seen an animal take in a film before) it's worth it.
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8/10
A fascinating South African film
planktonrules18 February 2008
Warning: Spoilers
This short film begins during the days of Apartheid in South Africa. A cute little Black boy finds a puppy and adopts it. However, shortly after this, the sadistic owner of the plantation on which the boy works orders the boy to put the dog in a sack. At this point, and animal lovers might flinch at this scene, the man kicks the puppy repeatedly in order to convince the impressionable dog that the child did this. Years pass and the nasty White farmer got his wish--the dog (which is huge and appears to be part Rhodesian Ridgeback and part Mastiff) hates black people.

Later, when this nasty farmer and the boy (now grown into manhood) are out working on the plantation, tragedy strikes. Ironically, the way the White guy trained the puppy worked too well--resulting in a very deserved but sad twist.

The film really benefits from an excellent script and lots of irony. It makes a statement about racism but does it in a novel and non-preachy way. Well made and well worth a look.
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Why didn't this win the Oscar?
madfoot-224 March 2003
Because it was too depressing? It was brutal to watch--I had to hide my face for much of the movie. But its truth was undeniable and so, so painful. It worked on so many levels. At the end you can almost fool yourself that it ended differently... I think it should have won. The movie that did win confronted racism in a sweet, unthreatening way, and was very frothy; this one was more difficult, and tougher to watch--well, I suppose it had less appeal for that reason. Feh.
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9/10
Insightful and moving...
ausfilmmaking24 February 2003
"In the old South Africa, a Xhosa boy is used as a pawn by a white farmer to 'train' his puppy. Ten years later in the new South Africa, both their lives lie in the balance at the mercy of the fully grown dog".

If anyone tells you you cannot 'really' emotionally connect with audiences in a short film format, please show them INJA, by Australian director and AFTRS graduate Steve Pasvolsky.

Beautifully shot, and skillfully directed, this short film is both insightful and moving. Nominated for an Academy Award, and having already won several awards, including the Live Action Film over 15', Student Category at the Palm Spring International Festival of Short Film, USA in 2001.

If you come across this film, please take the time to watch it... it's remarkable!
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9/10
Insightful and moving...
ausfilmmaking24 March 2003
"In the old South Africa, a Xhosa boy is used as a pawn by a white farmer to 'train' his puppy. Ten years later in the new South Africa, both their lives lie in the balance at the mercy of the fully grown dog".

If anyone tells you you cannot 'really' emotionally connect with audiences in a short film format, please show them INJA, by Australian director and AFTRS graduate Steve Pasvolsky.

Beautifully shot, and skillfully directed, this short film is both insightful and moving. Nominated for an Academy Award, and having already won several awards, including the Live Action Film over 15', Student Category at the Palm Spring International Festival of Short Film, USA in 2001.

If you come across this film, please take the time to watch it... it's remarkable!
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9/10
Good film
Spanner-217 March 2003
This film is about a rancher in South Africa who dislikes his dog bonding with a young black boy, so he trains the dog to dislike the boy. Kinda brutal in its depiction of race relations in South Africa and in the way they treat the dog. While the film's narrative is sometimes less than complete, it is a well made film with solid performances that kept me watching from start to finish. GRADE: B+
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5/10
Shocking short
Polaris_DiB29 November 2008
Warning: Spoilers
Another Oscar baiter, but this one has a lot more too it and definitely a lot more skill behind its message. "Inja" is the story of a boy, his dog, and the evil dog-beating white man who turns the dog against the boy and his black compatriots. Admittedly, the movie is very shocking, and it comes to a point in the end that makes a real statement about who is the one who cannot recover, the boy or the dog. I could do without the coercive ambiguity of the ending, and it really takes a while for the story to reveal where it's going, but it's definitely better than Award Winner "This Charming Man".

--PolarisDiB
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Good short, low budget student film.
ultramatt2000-130 November 2003
Warning: Spoilers
This film was from Austrailia. It was located in South Africa. Inja means dog. The story deals with a poor black boy, and a rich old man, and a dog. The boy is having a great time with the dog. But the man tells the boy to put the dog in the sack, and he began beating it. The man said to his wife, "He got to learn his lessons". Years pass by. The boy is a teen. He begins working with the man. The dog is grown up. During work as the old man was showing how to pound a large post. He gets a heart attack. And asks for his pills. But the dog is barking at the boy angrily. He think that the dog is mean because, the dog thinks that the boy beaten the dog in the sack. But all along it was the man. Because this was the man's dog. He wanted it to love the man. The boy sees the man suffering, and dying. And the dog barks at the boy insuch fury. So he runs for his life, leaving the man dead, because he has to save his own life, than the life of the man. And you think low-budget movies flop. THE FULL MONTY (1997) was shot in a low budget, and it did well. So did this one.
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