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Lawn Dogs
Overlook Pick

Lawn Dogs

Innocence is a dangerous friend.
71
User Score111 ratings
TMDB 7.116+19971h 41mEnglish
Drama

Synopsis

In the affluent, gated community of Camelot Gardens, bored wives indiscriminately sleep around while their unwitting husbands try desperately to climb the social ladder. Trent, a 21-year-old outsider who mows the neighborhood lawns, quietly observes the infidelities and hypocrisies of this overly privileged society. When Devon, a 10-year-old daughter from one family, forges a friendship with Trent, things suddenly get very complicated.

Director
John DuiganFrom TMDB credits
Studio
Toledo Pictures2 production companies
Release
November 21, 1997Released
Box Office
$106,404Budget $7M

Top Cast

8 of 12
Sam Rockwell
Sam Rockwell
Trent Burns
Mischa Barton
Mischa Barton
Devon Stockard
Christopher McDonald
Christopher McDonald
Morton Stockard
Kathleen Quinlan
Kathleen Quinlan
Clare Stockard
Bruce McGill
Bruce McGill
Nash
David Barry Gray
David Barry Gray
Brett
Eric Mabius
Eric Mabius
Sean
Tom Aldredge
Tom Aldredge
Trent's Father

Trailers & Photos

Reviews

From TMDB users
Wuchak
Jan 2, 2020

***Great plot, cast & locations, but problematic execution*** An athletic 21 year-old groundskeeper (Sam Rockwell) lives in a ramshackle trailer in the woods near a gated community and mows the lawns of its wealthy but morally bankrupt occupants. A perceptive 10 year-old girl (Mischa Barton) is drawn to his genuineness because she discerns the hypocrisy of her parents (Christopher McDonald & Kathleen Quinlan) and the fakeness of her new community. But can an unconventional friendship like this last in such a scenario? Bruce McGill plays the security guy at the complex. "Lawn Dogs" (1997) is a drama with a satirical edge that has everything necessary for a great movie, but then fumbles a bit in execution. For instance, the key sequences where Trent (Rockwell) and Devon (Mischa) start to develop a friendship feel forced. The script needed tweaked with maybe some ad-libbing, but SOMETHING needed done to make these important scenes work better. As it is they’re at best serviceable and at worst unconvincing. If you can get past that serious flaw (and a couple cavils), there’s a lot of good here, even a little greatness. One critic denounced the film on the grounds that it didn’t know what its message was. Really? It has three main points and they come across loud and clear, but I’m not going to give ’em away and spoil it for viewers. The movie runs 1 hour, 41 minutes, and was shot in Prospect, Kentucky, and the surrounding area (just northeast of Louisville, by the Ohio River). GRADE: B-

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