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Heart of a Dog
Overlook Pick

Heart of a Dog

79
User Score192 ratings
TMDB 7.916+19882h 16mRU
DramaComedyScience Fiction

Synopsis

In 1920s Moscow, shortly after the October Revolution, a stray dog named Sharik is taken in by Professor Preobrazhensky, a wealthy and respected surgeon. The professor performs a daring medical experiment on the dog that changes him into a human being. As the newly transformed Sharikov begins to navigate life in the professor’s apartment, his crude behavior and revolutionary ideas turn the household upside down.

Director
Vladimir BortkoFrom TMDB credits
Studio
Lenfilm1 production companies
Release
November 11, 1988Released
Box Office

Top Cast

8 of 37
Evgeniy Evstigneev
Evgeniy Evstigneev
Professor Filipp Preobrazhenskyy
Boris Plotnikov
Boris Plotnikov
Doctor Bormental
Vladimir Tolokonnikov
Vladimir Tolokonnikov
Sharikov
Nina Ruslanova
Nina Ruslanova
Darya Petrovna
Olga Melikhova
Olga Melikhova
Zinochka
Aleksei Mironov
Aleksei Mironov
Fyodor
Roman Kartsev
Roman Kartsev
Shvonder
Anzhelika Nevolina
Anzhelika Nevolina
Vasnetsova

Trailers & Photos

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Reviews

From TMDB users
Tonis
Feb 28, 2025

The story centers on Professor Filipp Filippovich Preobrazhensky, a brilliant but arrogant surgeon, who believes he can improve humanity through scientific intervention. He performs an experimental operation, transplanting the pituitary gland and testicles of a recently deceased human alcoholic and criminal, Klim Chugunkin, into a stray dog named Sharik. The experiment is initially a success, as Sharik transforms into a humanoid creature, named Polygraph Polygraphovich Sharikov. However, Sharikov embodies the worst aspects of his human donor: he is crude, aggressive, and opportunistic. He quickly becomes a disruptive force in Professor Preobrazhensky's life and the surrounding communal apartment. Sharikov, fueled by his newfound human status and a rudimentary understanding of revolutionary rhetoric, becomes a member of the local housing committee, empowered by the zealous and equally inept Comrade Shvonder. He abuses his position, wreaking havoc and threatening the professor's comfortable lifestyle. Professor Preobrazhensky, horrified by the monster he has created, realises the catastrophic consequences of his hubris. He ultimately reverses the experiment, transforming Sharikov back into a dog. The film vividly portrays the chaos and uncertainty of post-revolutionary Russia. The old social order is crumbling, and new, often ill-prepared, individuals are thrust into positions of power. The housing committee and Sharikov's rise symbolize the dangers of unchecked authority and the erosion of traditional values. Bulgakov's satire exposes the inherent flaws in human nature, regardless of social class or political ideology. Sharikov's transformation reveals the animalistic instincts that can lurk beneath the surface of human behaviour. The story serves as a cautionary tale against the dangers of attempting to radically transform society through artificial means. The film demonstrates that forcibly altering human nature can have unforeseen and disastrous consequences. The film suggests that tampering with the natural order can have unintended and destructive results. That you cannot create a "new man" by simply changing external factors. ##This review has been created with Gemini 2.0 Flash

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