![Hachi: A Dog's Tale [DVD] [2009] [Region 1] [US Import] [NTSC]](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/71Cgd7oAw2L._AC_SL3840_.jpg)



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From Academy Award®-nominated director Lasse Hallström (2000, The Cider House Rules) comes HACHI: A DOG’S TALE, a film based on one of the most treasured and heartwarming true stories ever told. Golden Globe winner Richard Gere (2002, Best Actor in a Musical or Comedy, Chicago) stars as Professor Parker Wilson, a distinguished scholar who discovers a lost Akita puppy on his way home from work. Despite initial objections from Wilson’s wife, Cate (Academy Award® nominee Joan Allen – 2000, Best Actress, The Contender), Hachi endears himself into the Wilson family and grows to be Parker's loyal companion. As their bond grows deeper, a beautiful relationship unfolds embodying the true spirit of family and loyalty, while inspiring the hearts of an entire town. Review: Hatchi so sad - Have a box of tissues 😢 great movie Review: Hachi will break your heart - This is a beautiful family film that is based on a true story and will have you in tears by the end of the film. Loved this film.

| ASIN | B0031RAOVY |
| Aspect Ratio | 16:9 - 1.85:1 |
| Best Sellers Rank | 53,865 in DVD & Blu-ray ( See Top 100 in DVD & Blu-ray ) 4,161 in Children & Family (DVD & Blu-ray) |
| Customer reviews | 4.7 4.7 out of 5 stars (11,738) |
| Is discontinued by manufacturer | No |
| Item model number | 043396321403 |
| Language | Unqualified |
| Media Format | AC-3, Closed-captioned, Colour, Dolby, Multiple Formats, NTSC, Subtitled, Widescreen |
| Number of discs | 1 |
| Product Dimensions | 19.05 x 13.34 x 1.27 cm; 68.04 g |
| Release date | 9 Mar. 2010 |
| Run time | 1 hour and 33 minutes |
| Studio | Sony Pictures |
| Subtitles: | English |
T**Y
Hatchi so sad
Have a box of tissues 😢 great movie
D**E
Hachi will break your heart
This is a beautiful family film that is based on a true story and will have you in tears by the end of the film. Loved this film.
S**E
Based on a true story, and a GENUINE family tearjerker
OK, firstly, it has to be said that this film will not test you with its complexity and fancy narrative, nor does it boast special effects in abundance............ Unless you know Akitas, in which case you could look at getting one to return a ball as a pretty special effect! Nope, this film just tells a very simple story, but it is told very much from the heart. I'm 45, 6ft plus and cry at very little....... This film, somehow, gets right into you and gives you a gift. That gift is the visualisation of love, unequivocal and forever lasting. Although this film is set in the States, the backbone of the story is very true. I have had Akitas for some years, and know the story of Hachiko very well, having read the Japanese biography of this amazing dog well before this film was realised. I won't go into the storyline of this film at all, but I will say that all parts were very well cast, and the dogs that played Hachi were amazing. True, as with some negative reviewers claims, this film is, as stated earlier, simple. BUT, it is beautiful on every level. Watched it many times now, as has my partner and my daughter, and we all end up in tears, but that is WHY this film exists........ At the end of the film we all hug our dogs, one of whom is an Akita, and thank God for the bond we have with them, and the love and enjoyment they give us. 10 out of 10 just for reminding us of the simple things in life that really matter. Oh, and for those that can't see this film for what it is............ Seriously, open up guys! Over and out!
C**E
Sentimental, moving and nicely directed
Our Akita watched this movie with us on the sofa with us, and greatly enjoyed it. Moving the location to the US and using Richard Gere is so Hollywood, I'd have preferred an English dubbed version set in Japan for authenticity. Akita's are very unique and loyal and a source of delight to their owners, IF PROPERLY SOCIALISED, TRAINED AND CONTROLLED. They are not an easy dog for inexperienced owners and a real handful if you don't know what you are doing. Please do not get an Akita without researching the breed, or you are being daft. They are huge, need a lot of time and the right accomodation and can be very dominant to other dogs. The film didn't show Richard Gere being dragged across the street as his Akita tried to get to the other side and sit on the yappy little dog winding it up. The dogs used in the film were highly trained, docile, and created a rather rosy biased view of Akitas. They can be unpredictable with other dogs, dig huge holes in the garden, shed fluff all over the place, and cost a great deal to look after properly. That said, the two Akitas I've had have enriched my life beyond description. My Ruby is a registered therapy dog who I take into old folks homes to cheer them up. Properly trained Akitas are wonderful, bad and irresponsible owners have given the breed a mixed reputation.
M**Y
Hachi
Great film,, very sad beautiful story,, recommended but I love Richard gere
V**.
Beautiful but will make you tear
Very heart wrenching story. Dog lovers will shed a tear.
C**N
HACHI, A DOG'S TALE
HACHI, A DOGS TALE Terrific movie, starring Richard Gere, and the dog(s) who played Hachi. A true story of love and faithfulness between a dog and his person. A dog, bred in Japan, is sent to the USA to be delivered to it's new owner. The carrier is misdirected and ends up on the train station platform in a small New England town. Eventually Richard Gere takes him home. Every day Hachi follows Gere to the train station, which Gere takes to and from his job. He is a college professor of music. Hachi goes home after the train comes, and returns to the station at 5 p.m. to wait for Gere's return. Day in, day out, year in, year out, no matter what the weather is, or how cold or hot it is, Hachi is there. Hachi never missed, even after Gere has a heart attack and doesn't come home ever again. This movie was nominated for several academy awards in 2009. I recommend it for the family, including children of all ages. Fantastic dog! A good lesson on love and faith, and the heart of a dog. Well done. Have tissues nearby.
V**A
Denial needs professional help, even to animals?
I teared up over this movie. It was well acted showing family relationships and consideration of others feelings and interests. It teaches 'people understanding' the relationship between humans and animals, especially taming animals and what we lack when we do it. If you decide to tame an animal, you are treating it as a human being and therefore you have a duty to see to its needs, which is very good in this film. But, other family members have to understand the animal as well and see to its needs. There is nothing like hurting and loneliness in a world full of people. Animal therapy, if there is such a thing, could help in some extreme situations. Well tamed animals in the end become less animal and more human, in my opinion and so deserve to be part of family. The movie also shows how even outsiders, at a time of need, can care from a distance and leave the vulnerable, in this case animal, to carry the burden of loss on their own. I don't own an animal pet, but I could imagine, would taking the dog to hospital grounds or funerals where they can see the picture of their loved one in a coffin and then the coffin being lowered make a whole lot difference? and then to an animal therapist to deal with loss? It just hurt so much to see anyone or animal suffer loss to such a point like that! Anyone right from the outsiders could have taken over with the help of the dog therapy, and also adoption could have intervened maybe?, a new place out of town? I would take the animal to the grave to see the coffin being lowered. Given its based on a true story make it hurt more!
G**L
Excelente película si te gusta el género y buen servicio de entrega.
J**S
Hachi: A Dog’s Tale (2009) is a true dog story. No, no — not a bad movie, it’s a great movie, a truly great movie. Truly, and true to the real-life story of a Japanese Hachi-Ko who lived in an earlier century. Truly a dog story, because it is all about a dog, not just about the people who lived with the dog, as most “dog stories” are. If you love dogs, the images of Hachi are irresistible. And a truly great movie, for many reasons. The imagery is simply gorgeous. The acting superb, all around. The musical score hauntingly unforgettable. The screenplay well paced, avoiding over-sentimentality in a story that has to bring tears to the eyes of any red-blooded person. It is a movie that works on many levels. For its purely sentimental plot about a dog who never gave up loving his master, it conveys the story effectively such that any child can enjoy. (And the plot is framed by the telling of the young boy who has grown up hearing the story, and now is telling it to his classmates at school.) This is where its charm as a true dog story is unparalleled. On another level, it is a re-make of the Japanese film (1987) entitled Hachiko Monogatari, which is based more literally upon the life of the original Hachi-Ko. The Japanese film interprets his life story as a morality tale, in sombre tones of reproach for all the failures of human actors who fail Hachi in some way. The American re-make inverts the dark tone, translating it into a kinder, gentler tale. Love abounds in the life of this dog. Half of the film depicts the joyous companionship of the music professor and his dog. The professor and his wife enjoy a happy, loving marriage, and secondary characters are also portrayed in warm tones. An interesting technique is to visualize Hachi’s perspective towards humans in nearly colorless images, whereas the human perspective contrasts in full color. We see Hachi lying in his back yard while the professor’s wife tends to her garden. Hachi watches her. He rolls over onto his side, seeing her image with gravity on one side. Then rolls onto his back, seeing her completely upside down. Is this just to drive home the issue of contrasting viewpoints as it relates to the morality of this tale? Or is it also to reveal how an uncritical mind accepts reality, as Hachi sees it, and not just as a human mind expects to see it? There is a critical scene at the center of the movie, where a Japanese guru-figure reads briefly at the graveside, speaking of a philosophy of unconditional love and unconditional acceptance. I cannot help but see the morality of this film in the context of this scene, which is probably too fleeting (my only criticism of the film). Hachi accepts unconditionally what his master can give to him, limited as it has to be; he sees life just as it is. But Hachi loves totally and gives himself without limitation. The professor too accepts Hachi’s unwillingness to play fetch, no matter how much he wishes for his dog to make him happy in this token way — until the final day, when Hachi seems to have forewarning of his master’s death, and he begs him to stay home and cavorts with him, fetching ball for the first and only time. When the professor falls in an apparent heart attack, he drops that ball he has been holding. At this deeper level, in my understanding of the story, there is again the failing of secondary human characters to fully engage Hachi, in the unconditional terms portrayed in the relationship of Hachi and his master. After her father’s death, the professor’s daughter sincerely offers Hachi a home, but she cannot fulfill her commitment completely. Her family has to come first. At least she has the understanding to give Hachi her permission to leave, to live on the streets, free to live out his own imperative. And so do others, allowing Hachi to do what he has to do. The shift of seasons through the years, the flow of life, passes gently. Only the hotdog stand owner comes close to standing by his promise to look after the dog as Hachi pursues his lonely life, waiting. So Hachi waits, for 10 years, and only in his final moments of transcendental imagination experiences his reunion with the man whom he has always loved and will always love. It is easy for me to transpose Hachi’s morality tale to my own life. I have never lived with a dog, but with many cats. The meaning is the same. Animals are capable of an unconditional love which humans find difficult to emulate. We can only go so far in devoting our lives to them, as they devote themselves to us. It is with that knowledge, and that ultimate regret, that I will leave the rest unspoken.
A**R
i thought I was getting this movie in English and its not......I guess I ordered the wrong one....
S**S
Hachiko. Film stupendo. Ma che dico, meraviglioso, toccante, indimenticabile. Chi ama gli animali e in particolar modo i cani non puo' restare impassibile davanti a questa storia. Sceneggiato alla perfezione e recitato perfettamente da Richard Gere e Joan Allen. Un film che è un colpo al cuore. Com'è noto, la storia è basata su fatti realmente accaduti ma ciò che il regista e l'intero cast sono riusciti a fare al meglio è trasmettere le emozioni non solo dei personaggi umani ma anche dei protagonisti a quattro zampe, si perché Haci lo vediamo cucciolo, poi adolescente e anziano. Ho pianto come un bambino durante la lunga straziante sequenza finale. Haci che si addormenta e rivede il suo amato padrone. Pochi film riescono ad emozionarmi così tanto. Potessi darei 10 stelle. Grande plauso va anche alla colonna sonora, una musica bellissima e struggente che tocca l'anima di chi ama la natura e gli animali tutti. Il messaggio potente che questo film ci lascia è che l'amore tra un cane e il proprio padrone può essere indissolubile e superare perfino i confini dell'esistenza terrena. Ed io ci credo, credo che nell'aldilà potremo ritrovare in Dio anche le creature che ci hanno fatto compagnia in questa vita. Qualità video e audio eccellenti. Spedizione velocissima.
T**.
Ein Film der nach einer wahren Geschichte entstanden ist.
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