White God is a movie about a girl with a dawg called Hagen.
She's forced to live with her father when her mother has to leave the country but her father doesn't like dawgs.
A new ruling says extra taxes must be paid for cross-breeds/b*stards, because the government is trying to get rid of these dawgs once and for all.
An elderly white woman snitches on them because she doesn't like those dawgs hanging around in her apartment building.
The father leaves Hagen in the streets to fend for himself, where he meets other abandoned dawgs trying to keep their community together.
He gets chased by government-assigned animal shelters to catch these wild, dangerous dawgs causing trouble to the community.
They never stop to think that they are the very reason these dawgs are loose in the streets, or maybe that was their intention all along.
Hagen manages to escape but falls into the hands of a man who thinks the only thing dawgs are good for is fighting other dawgs.
He's abused and made vicious so he'll more easily fight his brethren dawgs, and his master changes his name to Max, to further diminish his old identity.
After being forced to kill one of his dawgs, the dawg formerly known as Hagen realizes what he's become and escapes from his evil master.
Soon he's captured by the animal shelter, who plan to keep him and all other dawgs behind bars for the rest of their lives.
He doesn't play that shyt though, kills one of his guards by biting his fukking neck off and frees his dawgs so they can riot in the streets.
All the people starts to panic at the very sight of the group of dawgs, because what is more scary than a dawg? Dawgs grouping together in protest.
The city is forced to shut down and a curfew is announced, but that won't stop the dawg formerly known as Hagen and his dawgs for exacting revenge on all those who have wronged him.
In the end, he faces the only person who has always stood right by him, the girl that loved him. But after what he's been through, can the dawg formerly known as Hagen renounce living his life in anger in face of the one person that always loved him unconditionally and never stopped searching for him?
White God is a movie about a girl and her dawg, but there were moments I felt it could be about something else.