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By Alexandria Sage

CANNES, France, May 23 (Reuters) – A gentle Labrador mix

named Body won the “Palm Dog” award on the sidelines of the

Cannes Film Festival on Friday, a pat on the head from

canine-lovers and film critics for the oustanding movie

perfomance by a pooch.

Body starred in “Feher Isten” (White God) by Hungarian

director Kornel Mundruczo, which features more than 250 dogs.

The lead character is “Hagen” – a role shared by Body and a

second hound named Luc – who is abandoned by his family and

picked up by a man who trains him to be fighting dog.

At the film’s festival premiere earlier in the festival,

Body attended a photocall, walked the red carpet and was invited

onstage – wearing a bowtie.

The Palm Dog award is a play on the Palme d’Or, the Cannes

festival’s top prize.

“What an honour, what a historical hound!” said Palm Dog

organizer Toby Rose, who called the film a cross between

“Inglorious Barksterds” and “Ben Fur.”

It had been a golden year for dogs on film, Rose said.

“This Cannes has seen a raging outbreak of dog-risma,” Rose

said, citing Jean-Luc Godard’s real-life dog, Roxy Mieville, who

stars in his film “Adieu au Langage” (Goodbye to Language) and

Yves Saint Laurent’s French Bulldog Moujik in “Saint Laurent” by

director Bertrand Bonello.

The supporting role of Moujik takes a tragic turn as the dog

consumes the party drugs intended for his master and dies.

In another canine cameo, a fuzzy English sheepdog appears in

David Cronenberg’s critique of Hollywood, “Maps to the Stars”

and is accidentally shot by a teenage movie star.

“It was the biggest and best range of dog performances I

think I’ve ever known,” Rose told Reuters TV.

But in terms of the number of canines on screen at any one

time, “White God” takes the biscuit.

In its opening scene, a pack of 250 barking dogs, none of

them created by computer simulation, chase after the

protagonist, barking and snarling.

Most of the dogs used in the film were rescued in real life

from an animal shelter, then adopted by cast members and friends

after the shoot.

Although Body was not on hand to accept the award, director

Mundruczo accepted the stuffed bone prize on his behalf, saying

it was an “uplifting” experience working with his canine stars.

“They live in Los Angeles,” he said of Body and Luc,

promising to send the bone to their trainer.

(Additional reporting by Rollo Ross; Editing by Angus MacSwan)