Bark!

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Plot

Heather Morgan (who also scripted the film) portrays a dog-walker who has decided to stop talking and begins to act like the animals she tends to. The film is concerned mostly with her husband Peter (Lee Tergesen) and his attempts to help his wife. The supporting cast of this whimsical comedy includes Hank Azaria as Peter's most trusted friend, Vincent D'Onofrio as a psychiatrist who is in need of some mental health care, and Friends co-star Lisa Kudrow as a veterinarian. Kasia Adamik, the child of famed director Agnieszka Holland, helms this quirky comedy that played at the 2002 Sundance Film Festival. ~ Perry Seibert, Rovi

Cast

Mary Jo Deschanel - Betty; Scott Wilson - Harold; Aimee Graham - Rebecca; Wade Andrew Williams - Tom

Credit

Michelle Goode - Art Director, Nicole Arbusto - Casting, Joy Dickson - Casting, Alicia Allain - Co-producer, Heather Morgan - Co-producer, Rick Moran - Co-producer, Tim Brown - First Assistant Director, Kasia Adamik - Director, Jim Makiej - Editor, Eric Colvin - Composer (Music Score), Kaija Vogel - Production Designer, Irek Hartowicz - Cinematographer, Tom Reed - Producer, Kristin Myrdahl - Set Designer, Itamar Ben Jacob - Sound/Sound Designer, Heather Morgan - Screenwriter

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Bark!
Directed by Kasia Adamik
Written by Heather Morgan
Starring Lee Tergesen, Heather Morgan, Lisa Kudrow, Vincent D'Onofrio, Hank Azaria
Release date(s) January 11, 2002 (2002-01-11) (Sundance)[1]
Running time 100 minutes[1]
Language English

Bark! is a 2002 film written by Heather Morgan, directed by Kasia Adamik (the daughter of director Agnieszka Holland) and starring Morgan, Lee Tergesen, and Lisa Kudrow. The film debuted at the 2002 Sundance Film Festival, where it was nominated for a Grand Jury Prize.[2]

The "extremely low-budget" film,[3] which had its origins in a 90-second comedy sketch,[1] is about Lucy, a professional dogwalker (played by Morgan), who gradually assumes the identity of a dog. Tergesen plays Peter, her embarrassed husband, and Kudrow plays their veterinarian.

Variety, reviewing the film after its Sundance screening, said it "seems to be a throwback to the craziness-as-higher-expression-of-individuality school that was in vogue between The King of Hearts and Harold and Maude, noting "Lucy's withdrawal doesn't seem to spring from anything — unless urban life's everyday rudeness and an overbearingly suburban-banal family background count — and scene by scene, Bark! builds no discernible rhythm, viewpoint or mood apart from a faint, rudderless, shaggy-joke tenor.[1]

The film was screened at several film festivals, including the Moscow International Film Festival, the Munich Film Festival, the Warsaw International Film Festival, and the Cleveland International Film Festival, but never received a theatrical release.[4]

Cast

References

  1. ^ a b c d Bark! Review, from Variety
  2. ^ Awards for Bark! from the Internet Movie Database
  3. ^ After Friends: Looking for a Second Act, an August 18, 2002 article from The New York Times
  4. ^ Release information for Bark! from the Internet Movie Database

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Barck (family name)
Barkes (family name)
Barks (family name)