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How these people view an American film company 'appropriating' their story is something I would love to know. And, there is a statue to him as well as annual celebrations in this country. Third, if you are curious, Hachi's actual remains were stuffed after his death and he is on display at National Science Museum of Japan in Ueno, Tokyo. A few final notes: First, I noticed that AFTER the master died in this American adaptation, it ALWAYS seemed to be snowing in this town-for years and years after the death! Second, what's with the professor's wife?! Her husband dies and she finds Hachi at the end years later at the train station and is surprised to see him?! Where was she at the time.off-world or taking a very long nap?! Didn't someone bother to tell her about HER dog or didn't she ask about how old Hachi was doing?! This seems to be a missing plot thread. By all means watch it- but don't be surprised if you like it but don't love it. And, I just cannot imagine a pleasant doggy film making it to the IMDb's Top 250 List-but it did and it's currently #190-giving it a slightly higher rating than films like "The Best Years of Our Lives" (one of the greatest films of the 1940s), "Rocky" (the first one was very nice), "A Fistful of Dollars" and "The Celebration"-as well as the original Japanese film!! Overall, it's a nice doggy film that is VERY family-friendly at that and with a lovely and evocative piano soundtrack.
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Objectively speaking, the film is a remake-and that's one strike against it at the onset.
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But, there needs to be more than a cute dog to make a really good film-and currently this fame has an astonishingly high score of 8.2! Is this number, at least in part, less about the quality of the production and more a vote to signify that most everyone loves cute dogs? Well, yes.
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You cannot help but like the dog and enjoy seeing him interact with his owner (Richard Gere). I am a sucker for a film about a cute dog-and the Hachi in the movie is one of the cutest Akita's ever (much cuter, by the way, than the original Hachi). Why not just make a fictionalized story? Why keep a few details and change others-especially when this Japanese dog inexplicably shows up in Rhode Island! So does this lack of attention to detail mean I hate the film? Even as a retired history teacher, I cannot, as I must confess that I've owned dogs for years and currently have two massive hairy beasts who adore me (in addition to my two cats who alternate between adoration and ambivalence). This leads me to wonder WHY the film did a semi-remake. In fact, I did some reading and found several other similar accounts throughout the world. One thing that set him apart from most dogs was that Hachi would meet the professor at the train station after work each day! But, even more unusual is that after the professor's death, Hachi CONTINUED this routine-waiting patiently for his master every day! In many ways, the story is like that of the very famous Scottish dog, Greyfriars Bobby-who is memorialized in Edinburgh outside the pub and church where the do would do its daily ritual (lying at his master's grave and then visiting the pub). Back in the 1920s and 30s, the real Hachi was a dog owned by a Japanese professor. Oddly, however, this American version keeps SOME of the original Japanese story (such as the breed of dog, the dog's name and SOME of the events in the dog's life) and completely changes so much-especially since "Hachi-Ko" is based on a real life Japanese occurrence, not in America. Because sometimes, your trip ends before the in-flight movie does, and you really don’t want to ask the pilot to circle the airport just so you can catch the finale."Hachi: A Dog's Tale" is a remake of a Japanese film, "Hachi-Ko" (1987).Because sometimes, you fall asleep watching a mediocre rental, and would rather return it on time than pay two more bucks just to see the end.Because sometimes, your TiVo timer didn’t get it quite right, and cut off the crucial final minutes of something that won’t get shown again for six months.Because sometimes, you’re not interested in seeing that movie everyone’s talking about but are dying to know what the hubbub is about anyway.Because sometimes, you vaguely remember an old movie that had some sort of plot twist at the end of it, but can’t remember what it was.Because sometimes, the surprise “spoiler” ending is the only reason you’d pay $11 to see what is otherwise a turkey of a film.