

Stray
Synopsis
Experience the bustle of Istanbul street life through the eyes of three stray dogs – Zeytin, Nazar and Kartal.
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Reviews
From TMDB usersMost dog films borrow the dog to make humans cry. Stray flips the camera to the pavement and lets the dog do the looking. Elizabeth Lo spent years on the streets of Istanbul shadowing Zeytin, a calm tan mutt, along with Nazar and a scrappy pup named Kartal, and she shoots almost everything at their eye level. You watch human ankles, cigarette butts, traffic and late-night arguments drift past the way a dog registers them: as weather, not as story. What makes the film land is the law it quietly rests on. At the time of filming it was illegal in Turkey to kill or capture stray dogs, so Zeytin lives in the open instead of behind shelter bars. That single policy choice turns a documentary about dogs into a patient argument about who a city decides to protect. The strays share their corners with young Syrian refugee boys sleeping rough, and Lo never spells out the parallel because she does not need to. The dogs and the boys are both tolerated, fed sometimes, moved along often. Be warned: it is slow. No narrator, no three-act arc, no rescue-and-redemption beat to reward you at the end. If you want a plot, look elsewhere. But if you want to understand how a dog actually experiences a city street, the boredom, the scraps, the sudden tenderness from a stranger, this is the most honest dog film I have seen in years. Full review: https://dogwithblog.in/stray-documentary-review/







