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Harry_Gill
Most road-trip movies give the human the arc. 777 Charlie hands it to the dog. Dharma is a bitter, solitary factory worker who snaps at his neighbours and coasts through a life he has stopped caring about. Then a Labrador named Charlie, a former breeding-mill dog who has known nothing but a cage, slips into his yard and refuses to leave. What follows is a nearly three-hour journey across India that quietly rebuilds a broken man through the loyalty of an animal who has every reason to trust no one. Rakshit Shetty plays Dharma without softening the early ugliness, which makes the thaw feel earned rather than cute. Charlie carries enormous emotional weight and never reads like a trained prop doing tricks. The film does run long, and a few stretches lean hard on the score to tell you exactly how to feel. It earns most of those tears anyway. What lifts it above the usual loyal-dog formula is the ending, which I will not spoil, except to say it argues that a dog can reshape a person's entire life and still ask for nothing in return. For a Kannada film that became a pan-India phenomenon, that emotional honesty is the real reason it travelled so far. Full review and why it matters for Indian dog lovers: https://dogwithblog.in/777-charlie-movie-review/
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