Sled Dogs (2016) Poster

(2016)

User Reviews

Review this title
14 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
6/10
Wow look at all the hate for this film
elvis_the_king-3348319 April 2018
"Omission of facts", "yellow journalism", "political grandstanding", Wow looks like several people have their panties in a bunch over this film. I'm going to take a guess that all of these 1 star, hate filled reviews are from people whose livelihood may be affected by the truth of this film.

This film isn't perfect, hence my six point score. But I cannot brush this aside as a "hack piece" attempting to paint the dog sledding industry in a bad light. There is simply too much truth in this movie that cannot be denied. Throughout my life every time I have seen pictures, or videos, or news stories about dog sledding I have seen the same images - many dogs in a yard chained to a stake in the ground with only a 3-8 foot long chain. That is cruelty. Anyone who thinks that such treatment is not cruelty should put a tight dog collar on their neck and chain themselves to a pole in one of these sled dog yards for one week. You cannot come off the chain at all for that week, and you will be provided water and food once a day just as the dogs get in the 7-8 months there isn't snow on the ground and they are left in the yards restrained 24/7. After your week on the chain then try to tell me or anyone else that such treatment is not cruelty.

Anyone can go to YouTube and search "dog sledding operations" and you will find many videos that show dogs in these dog sled kennels chained to posts exactly as described above. If this movie only represents two bad kennels, why can't I find any videos on YouTube showing dog sledding operations where the dogs are treated humanely and decently?

Finally, I have always had the skill of being able to read canine body language. Dogs do most of their communication via body language. I could have watched this movie with the audio muted and I would have come away with the same opinion. The body language of the dogs tells me everything I need to know; the dogs shown at the checkpoints during the Iditarod, the dogs at both Windrift and Krabloonik Kennels, and especially the scenes with the puppies starting their training at Windrift.

Dog sledding as a business is cruelty. If the Iditarod is to continue, it should respect the athlete dogs that participate and force the teams to use multiple sub teams that are relayed during the race so that no dog has to run in excess of 100 miles a day for ten or more days. I can only hope that this film gets a network platform to be seen so that more voices can be heard in the opposition to this treatment of sled dogs.
10 out of 19 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
One sided and inaccurate
uffda-2271010 April 2018
Totally inaccurate...the other 99% of mushers beg to differ.
15 out of 23 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
Well presented, uncovering the hidden truth about Dog Sledding.
digiapb2 November 2018
This is well-presented film demonstrating many of the inherent issues related to dog sledding.

More information continues to come out and people are becoming aware of the sham of this industry.

It is unfortunate that so many with a vested interest in maintaining the nostalgic myth of Dog Sledding are choosing to rate this film with one star. It is out of fear of the public waking up to the lie.

Take the time to watch Sled Dogs, it is worth it.
5 out of 9 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
1/10
Great Editing...
publisher-236-73338010 April 2018
Great editing, they managed to edit out the truth and focus on one bad kennel amongst thousands and made it seem every kennel is like that. Worse yet, they had to lie, alter and edit clips as well as make things up to make their point. In other words, no point. Every musher I know is against what happened at Whistler. No musher I know (hundreds of them) acts anything like Whistler.

Focusing on 1 bad kennel to try to lead you to believe every kennel is like that is like focusing 1 case of child abuse and leading others to believe YOU are a child abuser because of that totally unrelated case. I can't believe this pack of lies even got funded.
36 out of 42 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
1/10
Lovely photography in a film full of lies
djqhusky-8057510 April 2018
While the film starts out nicely enough, it quickly descends into lies. Many are lies of omission by not presenting all the information available. The information on Starz which aired the film states: "a profile of what happens at sled dog operations after the Iditarod ends and the tourists go home." The only kennel in the movie that was used in Iditarod is of a rookie musher. He doesn't own that kennel, an Iditarod champion does. It is not a touring kennel. Their attempt to make the rookie look bad failed. His dogs came across the finish line in Nome with tails wagging and heads held high.

The attempt to portray Krabloonik in Colorado was so mixed up in it's messages. I have been to the kennel as recently as October of 2017. Under new management, it is wonderfully run. I saw dogs as happy as can be. The film claims they are tied to a chain for life. Not true. They get off those chains every day to run in the several fenced acres there. In winter, they are running down hill giving tourists rides in a sled. For sled dogs, this place is golden. The former owner may have had problems. But the film claims the current owner worked for him, so they must be bad as well. That too is untrue. They were there a few weeks before all the legal troubles began. They bought the kennel, at an outrageous price, to save the dogs. Dan MacEachen died, probably because of all the stress this whole event caused.

As for the situation in Whistler, BC that came as a shock to all mushers. The mushing community is always prepared to help fellow mushers in need. No one knew the kennel was in trouble. We all are very sad over that situation.

There are many more things I could add but will not go into a lengthy review. I have 8 pages of notes from the movie. All the "experts" presented on tethering dogs could easily have been refuted by other studies. Do your homework folks.

One last comment, near the end of the movie is video of dead dogs found in a conex trailer in Willow, Alaska. Of course, they never say who this belonged to and where it is. Of course not, because it didn't belong to a musher. I know this for a fact as I lived in Willow at the time and know the person who owned the trailer. I attended his trial for dog abuse. He was a hoarder who thought he could make money breeding dogs and selling puppies. He couldn't. No one does. If you think mushers make money off racing dogs, you are mistaken. Any money won at a race, immediately goes back into a kennel.

So, Fern thinks she has made a movie that will shut down the Iditarod and/or touring kennels. She hasn't. She has only made a work that proves she does not deserve the title director or documentarian. I say this with certainly as a documentary film maker myself. I have worked in television production since 1971 and have owned a sled dog team since then as well.
35 out of 45 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
1/10
Not even worth one star.
tonichelle-997-83593610 April 2018
Want to know the truth about mushing, tours, and Iditarod? Visit a kennel and make your own opinion that way, don't bother with half truths and vicious rhetoric.
22 out of 27 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
1/10
Yellow Journalism at its Worst
outdoorslass10 April 2018
This movie posits itself as a documentary but fails because of the many lies that are the results of omission by concealing information or juxtaposing sensational footage with a clip of an Iditarod musher to get the viewer to draw the false conclusion that they are related. The producer deliberately misled one of the mushers who is filmed in order to get the footage she then used in to suggest by innuendo that his dogs -- happy at the end of the Iditarod -- were somehow mistreated. She filmed, without my neighbors knowledge or consent, a musher working out of his kennel as well.

I had to chuckle at the review which claims the Iditarod vet checks are of no value. Clearly, this was written by a person who has never been through an Iditarod vet check and has never raced the Iditarod The dogs are extensively screened with blood work and EKGs prior to the race; dogs that have issues are not allowed to race. At the checkpoints, vets look over the dogs. These are dogs, who by the time they reach the start of Iditarod, typically have 2,000 to 3,000 miles on them that season so they are healthy athletes. Most humans don't get this type of care.

So, let's talk about the sled dog world that I know through my friends and neighbors. The dogs get excellent quality food (high quality kibble, meat, fat, fish etc.), they get daily exercise, and they love to run and pull the sled.

Most parents love their kids but there are some bad parents -- that does not mean that there should be no children. The same is true of dog owners and mushers: most love their dogs and take excellent care of them. The film shows some bad dog owners and mushers and then through innuendo and juxtaposition suggests that most sled dogs are generally neglected or mistreated. So, this film is just a 21st century example of yellow journalism.
25 out of 32 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
1/10
Not even good for a work of fiction
mseiler-6208410 April 2018
Here we have one hour and twenty-two minutes of political grandstanding against a part of American history. The filmmaker finds a rarity in the world of mushing and chooses to exploit it to fit her own personal narrative and distaste for something she has (clearly) little to no knowledge. She attempts to paint an entire subsection of our population with one broad stroke from the same brush. And she failed miserably at it.

To the viewer: don't waste your time with this. You'd actually be better off with reruns of "The Big Bang Theory,"

To the filmmaker: Stick to plants, Fern, because this film is one dog definitely deserved to be put down.
25 out of 33 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
1/10
Pack of lies
arcticot10 April 2018
Lots of misinformation patched together to mislead the audience.
19 out of 26 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
1/10
Lacks ANY truths
hockeymm-1846010 April 2018
I watched this because I couldn't imagine why any and everyone in the sled dog world found it so horrible. Now I know. It is fabrication. Having visited countless kennels, and the race and checkpoints - there is NO truth here. She's taken an isolated incident and an interview based on misrepresentation - and skewed it to support her agenda - which, by the way - is raising money. WOW - this is a truly sickening twisting of reality
18 out of 25 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
1/10
Don't Waste Your Time
badhusky11 April 2018
Don't waste your time and money watching this piece of fiction posing as a "documentary." Instead visit a kennel and see for yourselves how well cared for most sled dogs are. I say "most" because yes, as in any sport or endeavor there are bad actors out there. What Ms Levitt did here was focus on two horrible situations that should never have happened and extrapolated them into the entire sport of mushing. In doing so she tarnished the good names of all ethical mushers in the world. She misrepresented herself during filming of this piece and lied to get her footage. She also used shocking footage that had nothing to do with mushing, a trailer full of dead dogs, owned by a hoarder, not a musher. This film should have a disclaimer that it is fiction, not fact.
11 out of 16 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
1/10
How about truth for a change
wtlife11 April 2018
Need to have real people with real sled dogs do a movie that show all the ups & downs, good & bad... As in any walk of life there are good & bad people. I'd like to think there are more good of us than the idiot bad ones.
7 out of 12 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
1/10
One Bad Apple....
opalcharelaine11 April 2018
Gave it a 1 because I couldn't give it a negative number. The editors wanted you to believe that all sled dogs are abused. They would show the Iditarod Race and the mushers and then tell the story of the horrible treatment a few kennels for profit mistreated their dogs. I don't know any mushers who own a sport kennel, that make a profit!!! They then added a sign that read that 140 dogs had died on the Iditarod. However, they didn't break it down as to how many of those dogs died due to Moose Attacks, Buffalo Attacks, or drunks on snowmobiles running over the dogs as they laid sleeping off the side of the trails. Nor did they mention that approximately 44,000 dogs have ran in the Iditarod. I have had the pleasure of owning a dozen retired sled dogs. How many Pit Bulls, or Pitt Bull Mixes get euthanized each day or how many "Old Surrendered By Owner" dogs are killed daily??? I bet it is more than 140. To compare professional mushers with the kennel owners that shot or starved their dogs after a winter season is a travesty!
7 out of 13 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
5/10
Omitted facts about bad veterinary care in Iditarod
sleddogac24 May 2017
Unfortunately, in the film, claims made by Stu Nelson, the Iditarod's chief veterinarian, aren't corrected by anyone giving the facts. He portrays the Iditarod as an event in which dogs get good veterinary care. They don't.

Mushers often blast through checkpoints, so dogs don't get physical examinations. In some cases, dogs who have been at checkpoints for hours have died soon after leaving.

Iditarod veterinarians allow sick and injured dogs to race. In a recent Iditarod, one of Lance Mackey's male dogs ripped out all of his 16 toenails trying to get to a female who was in heat. This type of broken toenail is extremely painful. But veterinarians allowed Mackey to continue to race him. Imagine the agony the dog was forced to endure.

Here's another example: Veterinarians have allowed dogs with kennel cough to race in the Iditarod even though dogs with this disease should be kept warm and given lots of rest. Strenuous exercise can cause lung damage, pneumonia and even death. To make matters worse, kennel cough is a highly contagious disease that normally lasts from 10 to 21 days.

Nelson claimed that 30 percent of the dogs are dropped at checkpoints. That's inaccurate. On average, fifty percent of the dogs are left at checkpoints because they're injured, sick or exhausted.

FACTS: Sled Dog Action Coalition
12 out of 35 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed