Inja [Dog] is a 2002 South African short film directed by Steve Pasvolsky. Using a Xhosa boy as a pawn, a farmer teaches his puppy to be white man's best friend. Ten years later, both their lives hang in the balance at the mercy of the dog. The film was nominated for an Oscar for Best Live Action Short Film.
Direction
Pasvolsky packs a feature's worth of moral weight into 17 minutes.
Acting
The dog's performance is genuinely terrifying — trained or traumatized?
Director
Steve Pasvolsky
Trivia, insights & behind the scenes
Shot in post-apartheid South Africa, the film uses the dog as a metaphor for how systems of oppression are literally bred into loyalty — the Oscar nom helped it reach global audiences during a fraught moment of reckoning.
Pasvolsky originally wanted no dialogue; the sparse Xhosa and Afrikaans that remains makes the final confrontation's silence even more devastating.