Movie review: A child’s fierce lens on war and loss in ‘Don’t Let’s Go to the Dogs Tonight’

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In Don’t Let’s Go to the Dogs Tonight, the horrors of war and the contradictions of white colonial life in Africa are filtered through the raw, unfiltered eyes of a child. At the heart of this deeply affecting film is Lexi Venter, a 7-year-old newcomer who delivers one of the most natural and riveting child performances in recent memory.

Adapted from Alexandra Fuller’s 2001 memoir, the film is written, directed, and led by veteran actress Embeth Davidtz. It tells the story of Bobo, a white girl growing up on a farm in Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe) during the collapse of white minority rule. Originally conceived as a third-person narrative, Davidtz wisely shifted to tell the story solely from Bobo’s perspective, a decision that brings urgency and authenticity to every frame.

Bobo’s world is both terrifying and absurd. She casually mentions ambushes during breakfast, helps her father pack bullets, and fears “terrorists” in the night when she needs to pee. She smokes cigarettes, rides a motorbike, and confidently declares, “There’s nothing wrong with me, I’m perfect!” a line both heartbreaking and defiant in its delivery.

Davidtz, a South African native herself, grounds the story in real personal resonance. Like the Fuller family, her own life was shaped by racial violence, mental illness, and alcoholism. As Nicola, Bobo’s grief-stricken, bourbon-drinking mother, Davidtz delivers a gripping performance filled with rage, fragility, and contradiction.

The family’s deep connection to the land is underscored by tragedy, a daughter lost to drowning, buried on the farm, tethering Nicola to the soil with almost desperate fervor. Despite her lack of roots in the land, she claims it with the conviction of someone who has buried a child in its earth.

Filmed in South Africa, the movie is set around the pivotal 1980 Zimbabwean elections that brought Robert Mugabe to power. These political shifts loom large in the background as personal tensions mount. The family’s dynamic with their Black servants, Sarah (played tenderly by Zikhona Bali) and Jacob (Fumani N. Shilubana), reveals entrenched inequalities and uneasy alliances.

Sarah, in particular, serves as a surrogate parent to Bobo, offering rare warmth and boundaries in a house filled with emotional neglect. Their private connection is heartfelt and risky, complicated by class, race, and the looming threat of violence.

But it’s Venter’s performance that elevates the film. Discovered through a Facebook search, she was cast not for polish but for what Davidtz described as “feral” energy. Rather than relying on a script, Davidtz allowed Venter to improvise, guiding her through scenes with remarkable results. Her portrayal feels less like acting and more like lived experience — instinctive, vulnerable, and deeply human.

Moments of wild joy and painful clarity punctuate the story: Bobo singing a bawdy song as her world crumbles, defiantly puffing on a cigarette, or simply questioning her mother with the disarming, “Are we racists?”

Don’t Let’s Go to the Dogs Tonight is not a film that offers easy answers. But in Venter, Davidtz has found a voice for a generation born into the contradictions of inherited privilege and historical reckoning. The result is both deeply personal and historically resonant.

A Sony Pictures Classics release, Don’t Let’s Go to the Dogs Tonight is rated R by the Motion Picture Association for “violent/bloody images, language, sexual assault, and some underage smoking/drinking.” Running time: 98 minutes. ★★★ out of 4.

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Paraluman P. Funtanilla
Contributing Editor

Paraluman P. Funtanilla is Tutubi News Magazine's Marketing Specialist and is a Contributing Editor.  She finished her degree in Communication Arts in De La Salle Lipa. She has worked as a Digital Marketer for start-up businesses and small business spaces for the past two years. She has earned certificates from Coursera on Brand Management: Aligning Business Brand and Behavior and Viral Marketing and How to Craft Contagious Content. She also worked with Asia Express Romania TV Show.