Dogs Don’t Wear Pants: Dark romantic comedy from Finland

Review: BDSM film that’s far better than those dreary Fifty Shades pictures

Krista Kosonen in Dogs Don’t Wear Pants
Krista Kosonen in Dogs Don’t Wear Pants
Dogs Don't Wear Pants
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Director: J-P Valkeapää
Cert: Club
Genre: Comedy
Starring: Ester Geislerová, Ilona Huhta, Jani Volanen, Krista Kosonen, Oona Airola, Pekka Strang
Running Time: 1 hr 45 mins

Although he saves lives at work ever since his wife drowned on a lakeside holiday the death instinct is strong in cardiothoracic surgeon Juha (Tom of Finland’s Pekka Strang).

His muffled, miserable life is finally shaken up when his teenage daughter Elli (Ilona Huhta) asks for a tongue piercing for her birthday, a request that leads Juha to accidentally stumble into an S&M lair. There he encounters Mona (Krista Kosonen), who works as a physical therapist by day and as a dominatrix by appointment only. Intrigued, he returns for a BDSM session that brings him close enough to death to see his late wife.

Not long after, he’s smashing windows at work and forgetting all about his daughter in pursuit of Mona and her services. It’s a descent, but to where?

This dark romantic comedy from Finland and the Director’s Fortnight at Cannes features toenail removal, whipping, strangling, and some business with a tooth that’s guaranteed to make your eyes water. Yet beneath the body harness, lurks a good-natured and sweet-hearted rom-com and beneath the rubber bodysuit, there’s a Manic Pixie Dream Girl, albeit one who makes customers howl with burning wax.

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Striking a careful balance between body positivity and humour, consent and kink, Dogs Don’t Wear Pants creates a rabbit-hole bondage fantasia to counterpoint Juha’s muted, humdrum existence. The subterranean dungeon and club he visits may be neon-lit and sleekly seedy – Pietari Peltola’s cinematography has fun with vinyl – but the patrons are ordinary folk ordering drinks and passing pleasantries.

The script, co-written by the director and Juhana Lumme, is simple and elegant. Huhta and Kosonen have terrific chemistry, enough to burn up the screen even when the latter is barking orders and doing her worst.

Where was J-P Valkeapää when Hollywood was making those dreary Fifty Shades pictures?

Tara Brady

Tara Brady

Tara Brady, a contributor to The Irish Times, is a writer and film critic