![]() This includes not only the three or four breeds known as Laikas in English, but also other standard breeds that the FCI classifies together with them as "Nordic Hunting Dogs" (Group 5, Section 2 of the FCI classification). As the name of a dog variety, it is used not only in Russian cynological literature, but sometimes in other languages as well to refer to all varieties of hunting dogs traditionally kept by the peoples of the northern Russia and adjacent areas. The Russian word laika ( лайка) is a noun derived from the verb layat' ( лаять, to bark), and literally means barker. However a few laikas have specialized as herding or sled dogs. Generally, laika breeds are expected to be versatile hunting dogs, capable of hunting game of a variety of sizes by treeing small game, pointing and baying larger game and working as teams to corner bear and boar. Laika breeds are primitive dogs who flourish with minimal care even in hostile weather. Laikas ( / ˈ l aɪ k ə/ LY-kə Russian: Ла́йка, IPA: ) are aboriginal spitz from Northern Russia, especially Siberia but also sometimes expanded to include Nordic hunting breeds. But it’s hard to have a reaction after it ends other than: Woof.Laikas driving lynx (18?), Efim A. Space Dogs offers dignity to its pitiable subjects by stripping away any pretensions that humans have been friends to the creatures they claim as their closest companions. The truth is, Laika’s life was collateral damage, and the decades-long Russian project to memorialize her as a symbol of national pride is little more than a guilt-assuagement exercise. She is often memorialized as a heroic creature whose martyrdom earned her immortality among the stars. The sad story of Laika has inspired artists and writers for decades since the guileless little dog burned up alone. There is, however, something respectable and clarifying about its commitment to acerbity. Its brutality is certainly not going to appeal to everyone. Space Dogs will be available in mid-September through a few different venues, including the Alamo Drafthouse’s virtual release program. And it is a brutal and bitter movie, a more bracing testimony to cruelty than PETA has ever dreamed up. Toward the film’s end, the camera follows another startlingly hideous moment: A litter of stray puppies is poisoned by a local man, for reasons unknown.ĭirectors Elsa Kremser and Levin Peter describe the relationship between dogs and humans and the story of Laika as “a bitterness that we choose to illustrate” in a promotional statement for the film. Most honest nature documentaries following predators don’t shy away from showing the bloody reality of how they eat, but Space Dogs lingers over the cat’s limp corpse in a way that feels punitive, almost accusatory. In one jarringly long and close-up scene, one of the dogs tortures and kills a poor neighborhood cat. The cinematography is beautiful, almost dreamy, but the scenes are pieced together to unsettle, to make the viewer acutely aware of the gulf between human and dog. They trot from city sidewalks to leafy resting grounds, digging and barking and snarling and playing. The camera follows these modern creatures low to the ground, with minimal narration, creating a roving, diaristic dog’s-eye view. Space Dogs weaves its ghastly tape of the Soviet space race with footage of a pair of contemporary Muscovite strays going about their daily canine lives. It is a stylish and honest film-a rare combination!-but also merciless. ![]() In fact, if I had to imagine the film I would least like to be forced to watch, Clockwork Orange-style, with my eyes pried open, it might be this one. The film doesn’t have footage of Laika suffering in space (thank God) but it does have plenty of clips of scientists putting Laika and a few other research dogs through a barrage of exercises-they spin in a centrifuge, dazed-and subjecting them to invasive, gruesome surgeries in order to rig them up with the necessary sensors to see how long they’d last alone above the planet’s atmosphere. In reality, she lasted less than a day before heat and stress killed her, turning the object of cosmic progress into her small coffin. ![]() For years, the party line from officials was that Laika had been humanely euthanized before the satellite reentered the atmosphere. Despite initial assurances to the public that the pup would come back unharmed, she was always intended as a sacrifice to scientific progress, as there was no way to return her to Earth at the time. In 1957, the Soviet Union sent Laika to space in the satellite Sputnik 2. Space Dogs uses archival footage to tell the story of the clever, docile, and doomed Moscow street dog Laika, the first mammal to go into orbit-and the first mammal to die there. ![]()
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