Benji

1974

Action / Adventure / Family / Romance

13
Rotten Tomatoes Critics - Certified Fresh86%
Rotten Tomatoes Audience - Spilled55%
IMDb Rating6.1104879

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Plot summary


Uploaded by: FREEMAN

Director

Top cast

Deborah Walley Photo
Deborah Walley as Linda
Frances Bavier Photo
Frances Bavier as Lady with the Cat
Peter Breck Photo
Peter Breck as Dr. Chapman
720p.BLU 1080p.BLU
787.14 MB
1280*690
English 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 25 min
P/S 2 / 1
1.43 GB
1920*1036
English 2.0
NR
23.976 fps
1 hr 25 min
P/S 2 / 7

Movie Reviews

Reviewed by jotix1006 / 10

The dog star of the 70s

Every decade, or so it seems, Hollywood likes to build films around a cute dog. The early seventies was the era for "Benji", whose real name was Higgins, an attractive and photogenic dog that had already had a recurring role in "Petticoat Junction", the successful sitcom of the sixties. Edgar Buchanan, one of the stars from that show is on hand to act with an old pal again.

Joe Camp, the director and screen writer, targeted this film toward a young audience of children under ten. Higgins and his trainer, Frank Inn, do wonders for the film. "Benji" shows a dog that has a natural intelligence and responds well to whatever it was asked to do. The film will delight young children.

Some other faces in the movie are Frances Bavier, Deborah Walley, Patsy Garrett and others. Although the movie is predictable, let's not forget it was targeted for a young audience that will probably appreciate it more than the grown ups.

Reviewed by BrandtSponseller9 / 10

If Dogs Made Films

Although I did initially see Benji as a kid in 1974, I want to talk about some interesting facets of the film for adults instead.

Just a brief comment on showing the film to kids, though. It's probably going to be more of a gamble at this point in time for kids to watch Benji. There's a chance that older kids will be bored by the pacing, content, and general lack of humor. They'll probably hate the music, too. For younger kids (say, maybe 8 or younger),there's a better chance that they'll be entertained merely by seeing cute dogs do unusual things and also that they'll identify with the two child stars, who are about their age. But during the climax of the film, there is some more intense material (at least the ideas involved--the actual images are relatively tame) that may disturb some children.

I think that Benji is probably a safer gamble for adults at this point in time, but you have to approach it in a particular way, not necessarily approaching it either nostalgically or as a kid's film. Viewing Benji at this point in time, it played as a dog's film, told from a dog's perspective. While this is not the only film to tell a story from an animal's perspective, producer/writer/director Joe Camp does something unusual in that he plays things mostly seriously and realistically. There is a bit of tongue in cheek-ness to the whole affair--and one section that is a very funny outright spoof of late 1960s/early 1970s romance films, and the events are idealized slightly in a way that we might imagine a dog to idealize them, but overall, Benji is played straight, not for laughs or melodrama.

That fact is the cause of some unusual structural properties. Dogs' lives tend to be far more routine than humans' lives. Benji, as extraordinary as his life happens to be, is no exception. He's a stray who has a long daily routine that involves visiting various friendly people to obtain food. So the first half hour of the film sees Benji, from his perspective with a few third person omniscient intrusions, cycle through his daily routine two times.

On the third run-through, things begin to get more dramatic as his routine is broken up slightly--both in a positive way when he finds a girlfriend by the way of a Maltese and in a negative way when some shady characters intrude into his otherwise abandoned home. Although I agree that an interesting, entertaining film could have been made out of just showing Benji go through his routine, that would have been relatively avant-garde, and Camp maybe decided that his dog-perspective film was unusual enough already, so the principal story turns out to be these intrusions which set up more classical dramatic conflicts.

And Camp did a fine job of designing the film in the way he did. The climax works as well as it does only because he has taken us through Benji's lengthy daily routine a couple times. The climax and the build-up to the climax hinge on Benji hurriedly traveling his circuitous daily route a couple more times, and what pushes the events over the edge to success is that Benji has to strain to think more like a human.

I wouldn't have picked up on any of these things seeing the film as a preteen in 1974. But they are there, and for adults, this is an entertaining film as much for its unusualness as for any other reason--you just have to watch it with this in mind. This is what films might be like if dogs made them. And if you decide to show Benji to your children and explain these unusual qualities to them, you might just find it a more enjoyable experience for both of you.

Reviewed by bkoganbing6 / 10

One adorable dog

I'm not about to write a bad review of a film that started a small franchise for producer Joe Camp. What kind of grinch could you be not to like this adorable dog and the two kids, Cynthia Smith and Allen Fiuzat, who want to adopt tis ragamffin dog who comes around every morning looking for sscraps?

The kids and maid Patricia Garrett want to adopt him, but father Doctor Peter Breck is concerned about bringing in strays and what they might carry.

Benji's no Rin Tin Tin, but he's smart and resourceful as a wuartet of kidnappers find out.

Benji even got an Oscar nomintion for best song for Benji's Theme.

Benji marked he farewell performances of both Edgar Buchanan and Frances Bavier. The film spawned a bunch of successors.

You ave to be a grinch not to like this movie.

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