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Dogtooth (4K Restoration)

A controlling, manipulative father locks his three adult offspring in a state of perpetual childhood by keeping them prisoner within the sprawling family compound. (NR, 94 min.)

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Friday, July 11, 2025

(TBD)

Graceful, enigmatic, and often frightening, Dogtooth is an ingenious dark comedy that won the Un Certain Regard Prize at the 2009 Cannes Film Festival and an Academy Award® nomination for Best Foreign Language Film, propelling Oscar® winner Yorgos Lanthimos (Poor Things, The Favourite) to the forefront of contemporary cinema's most ambitious young filmmakers. In an effort to protect their three children from the corrupting influence of the outside world, a Greek couple transforms their home into a gated compound of cultural deprivation and strict rules of behavior. But children cannot remain innocent forever. When the father brings home a young woman to satisfy his son's sexual urges, the family's engineered "reality" begins to crumble, with devastating consequences. Like the haunting, dystopic visions of Michael Haneke and Gaspar Noé, Dogtooth punctuates its compelling drama with moments of shocking violence, creating a biting social satire that is as profound as it is provocative. [Kino Lorber]

Restored in 4K from the 35mm camera and sound negatives by Boo Productions and mk2 Films at Asterisk* Post and I Hear Voices sound studio. Colour grading by Gregory Arvanitis and Thimios Bakatakis. Digital sound restoration by Landros Ntounis. The restoration process was supervised by the director, Yorgos Lanthimos.

Starring: Christos Stergioglou, Mary Tsoni, Christos Passalis, Michele Valley
Director: Yorgos Lanthimos
Language: Greek
Genre: Comedy, Psychological Drama, Thriller

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"A fantastic comedy."

— David Lynch

"By far the most original film I've seen in a long time."

— John Waters

"By turns hilarious, macabre and baffling."

— Nicolas Rapold, The New York Times

"This brilliant and bizarre film from the Greek director Yorgos Lanthimos is superbly acted and icily controlled."

— Peter Bradshaw, The Guardian

"Few movies convey such a deeply unnerving atmosphere in nearly every scene while simultaneously capitalizing on an absurd black comic sensibility."

— Eric Kohn, IndieWire