Mutt Boy
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| Mutt Boy | |
|---|---|
| Hangul | 똥개 |
| RR | Ttonggae |
| MR | Ttongkae |
| Directed by | Kwak Kyung-taek |
| Written by | Kwak Kyung-taek Kim Jang-woo |
| Produced by | Jung Jong-seob |
| Starring | Jung Woo-sung Kim Kap-soo Uhm Ji-won Kim Tae-wook |
| Cinematography | Hwang Ki-seok |
| Edited by | Park Yu-kyeong |
| Music by | Yun Min-hwa |
| Distributed by | Show East |
Release date |
|
Running time | 103 minutes |
| Country | South Korea |
| Language | Korean |
Mutt Boy (Korean: 똥개; lit. 'Shit dog') is a 2003 South Korean drama film directed by Kwak Kyung-taek.[1][2] The film stars Jung Woo-sung as a developmentally disabled boy in a rural town whose fighting skills earn him a gang of followers but also constant run-ins with the law.
Chul-min's family consists of himself, his police detective father, his sick mother, and a dog. Chul-min calls the dog "Mutt" or "Stray Dog," but his father calls Chul-min "Mutt" too. The dog is Chul-min's best friend. He doesn't cry when his mom dies, but he does get furious when his dog is eaten by the older boys in his soccer club. He takes his revenge, but his father's patrol car awaits him.
Although he now must live on his own, Chul-min wins renown as the one who beat up 21 people all by himself. Many of the town's thugs start to hang around Chul-min, fascinated by him, and he becomes a leader of small-time gangsters. One day his father takes in a young orphan named Jung-ae who was a thief. Eventually Chul-min and Jung-ae develop feelings for each other and Chul-min confronts the gang who killed his beloved dog.