The Plague Dogs - actors, characters and roles

All actors and their roles in the film "The Plague Dogs"
The Plague Dogs (1982)
Timing: 1:43 (103 min)
The Plague Dogs - TMDB rating
7.959/10
231
The Plague Dogs - Kinopoisk rating
0/10
70
The Plague Dogs - IMDB rating
0/10
0

Actors and characters

Photo John Hurt #9981Photo John Hurt #9982Photo John Hurt #9983Photo John Hurt #9984

John Hurt

John Hurt
Character Snitter (voice)
Photo James Bolam #269278Photo James Bolam #343345

James Bolam

James Bolam
Character The Tod (voice)
Photo Nigel Hawthorne #26973

Nigel Hawthorne

Nigel Hawthorne
Character Dr. Boycott (voice)
Photo Warren Mitchell #265890

Warren Mitchell

Warren Mitchell
Character Tyson / Wag (voice)
Photo Judy Geeson #113387

Judy Geeson

Judy Geeson
Character Pekinese (voice)
Photo Patrick Stewart #8170Photo Patrick Stewart #8171Photo Patrick Stewart #8172Photo Patrick Stewart #8173

Patrick Stewart

Patrick Stewart
Character Major (voice)
Brian Stirner
Character Laboratory Assistant (voice)
Penelope Lee
Character Lynn Driver (voice)
Geoffrey Matthews
Character Farmer (voice)
Photo Barbara Leigh-Hunt #101511Photo Barbara Leigh-Hunt #101512
Barbara Leigh-Hunt
Character Farmer's Wife (voice)
Photo John Bennett #44898

John Bennett

John Bennett
Character Don (voice)
Photo John Franklyn-Robbins #75674
John Franklyn-Robbins
Character Williamson (voice)
Photo Bill Maynard #254815

Bill Maynard

Bill Maynard
Character Editor (voice)
Photo Malcolm Terris #115749

Malcolm Terris

Malcolm Terris
Character Robert (voice)
Photo Rosemary Leach #210749Photo Rosemary Leach #210750Photo Rosemary Leach #210751

Rosemary Leach

Rosemary Leach
Character Vera (voice)

What's left behind the scenes

  • The animated film was entirely hand-drawn. No computers or rotoscoping techniques (an animation technique where a cartoon is created by tracing over live-action footage frame by frame with real actors and sets) were used in its creation.
  • This was Dandy Nichols’ last widely released work (she voiced Phyllis). Nichols died on February 6, 1986, from pneumonia and heart disease.
  • The phrase that Snitter throws to the vulture (“Before we start, make sure we’re really dead”) is used in the composition “Testure” by the Canadian post-industrial group Skinny Puppy. The title of the composition plays on the words “test” and “torture.” Both the lyrics and the music video equate medical tests and animal research with cruel treatment.
  • Along with the animated films “Watership Down” (1978), “The Last Unicorn” (1982), and “The Secret of NIMH” (1982), “Cats Don't Look Back” is one of the darkest animated films. The American Film Association gave the films “The Secret of NIMH” and “The Last Unicorn” ratings of PG (parental guidance suggested) and G (general audiences), respectively. All four films were made before the PG-13 rating (parents strongly cautioned) was introduced. The PG rating for “Cats Don't Look Back” was changed to PG-13 in 1985.
  • The film's ending is much darker than the ending of Richard Adams' novel (1920-2016). Director Martin Rosen filmed the cartoon based on the manuscript provided by Rosen to the publishing house, after which the publishers convinced Adams to change the ending. In the book, Snitter's owner survives and saves him and Rowf. The monkey in the hyperbaric chamber also remains alive.
Did you like the film?

© ACMODASI, 2010-2026

All rights reserved.
The materials (trademarks, videos, images and text) contained on this site are the property of their respective owners. It is forbidden to use any materials from this site without prior agreement with their owner.
When copying text and graphic materials (videos, images, text, screenshots of pages) from this site, an active link to the site www.acmodasi.in must necessarily accompany such material.
We are not responsible for any information posted on this site by third parties.