Now it's been 9 long years when hachi's eyes only want the glimpse of professor warm hands and touch of professor and hachi gets old in the wait of professor. Then Whole family moved and hachi was taken by professor's daughter Andy but hachi was sure that professor will come back then he ran away from the Andy's house and started lives under the train and reach every day in the wait of professor and seasons changes and love and loyalty of hachi never gets old for professor. Sentimental, repetitive tale of a university professor (Richard. One sad day professor didn't come back and hachi Waits for him, news was very bad professor passed away by heart attack while he was teaching. A loyal Akita demonstrates the meaning of unconditional love in Lasse Hallstrom’s simple tearjerker Hachi: A Dog’s Story.
Hachi walks with professor daily and drop him to the railway station and pick him at the evening from railway station before professor comes. Professor and hachi shared a special bond where hachi never left professor alone they walk together, eat together and sleep together. I know that dogs have short span of life and they died maximum at the age of 14 or maybe 15 and it also depends upon the bread of dogs. Ken, a Japanese and good friend with professor, tells that the dog is a breed called an Akita which is very rare and that the Japanese character on his collar tag is the number eight - “hachi”. From Academy Award-nominated director Lasse Hallstrom (2000, The Cider House Rules) comes HACHI: A DOGS TALE, a film based on one of the most treasured and heartwarming true stories ever told.
Recently I watched this movie called Hachi A dog's tales who finds Parker Wilson at the railway station when he was a little cute puppy and then circumstances change and made in that way where hachi was adopted by professor Parker itself. We've seen people lov e having dogs and dogs are loyal to their respective masters and dogs are too loyal when it comes to loyalty. It's a love story of a dog and his master. Dogs are loyal, friendly and cute but like all the other animals Dogs can't talk but they can understand, in this movie Hachi : A dog's tale I've seen the dog talking. Dog's are the animals tamed by the human beings for a very long time. No matter, Hachi still gets an A?.It's a review about the movie named as Hachi- A Dog's Tale. A run-of-the-mill making-of doc is the sole EXTRA. And unless you’re made of stone, you will too. Film Review Title: Hachi: A Dog’s Tale Director: Lasse Hallstrom Main Actors: Richard Gere, Joan Allen and Cary-Hiroyuki Tagawa Length: 1h 55min Classification: Universal Rating: 4 stars ‘Hachi: A Dog’s Tale’ is a 2009 American fantastic drama film which was based on a true story of a faithful Akita Hachiko. Then, one day, his master doesn’t come home (I’m not giving anything away, it’s in the trailer) and Hachi just waits…and waits. Based on a true story, Hachi is the tale of a professor who adopts a lost Akita puppy who sits outside the train station every night, loyally waiting for him to come home. After all, films directed by Lasse Hallström ( Chocolat) and starring Richard Gere generally don’t bypass theaters and basically go straight to DVD if they’re half decent. At first glance, there was little reason to expect Hachi: A Dog’s Tale‘s inclusion on that list. What all of these movies about man’s best friend have in common is that they’re guaranteed to turn on the most stubborn waterworks. Since then, there have been heart-tuggers aimed at art-house crowds (1952’s Umberto D.), action-flick aficionados (2007’s I Am Legend), and mainstream multiplexers (2008’s Marley & Me). Hollywood’s been hip to this for ages, going back as far as 1943’s Lassie Come Home - a perennial that defies you not to reach for the Kleenex. We fellas may appear to be emotionally bulletproof sitting through female-friendly weepies like Steel Magnolias and Beaches, but throw a dog into the mix and the floodgates tend to bust wide open. Bill Murray knew that much in Stripes when he asked his platoon to raise their hands if they cried when Old Yeller died. I love dogs and this story is truly heart-wrenching but - its a poorly made film. Even the manliest moviegoer likes to have a good cry from time to time.