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Fido, 2006

Fido

English

Canada

Rating:6.9
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Profile of Fido

The mood of Fido is touching and humorous. The plot centers around pets, suburban life, and small town life. It is a comedy and horror movie. Stylistically, Fido is gory. It takes place, at least partly, in the suburbs. It happens in the 1950s.

Summary of Fido

Lying somewhere between PLEASANTVILLE and NIGHT OF THE LIVING DEAD, FIDO is a zombie buddy pic/love story set in a picture-perfect, technicolored 1950s suburb. With the world still recovering from a zombie war that broke out several decades prior, the town of Willard has found a way to keep the peace. The world beyond the gates may be overrun by zombies, but fortunately a huge corporation called ZomCom has managed to domesticate the undead, turning them into faithful servants of the human race. Director Andrew Currie's movie follows a young boy named Timmy (K'Sun Ray) as he develops a friendship with the zombie (Billy Connolly) his mother purchases to impress the new neighbors, Mr. and Mrs. Bottoms, when she finds out Mr. Bottoms (Henry Czerny) just happens to be the head of ZomCom itself. Naming his new friend Fido and initially treating him like a poorly-behaved dog, Timmy soon confirms what he always secretly suspected – that zombies can have feelings too. No one is more surprised by this than Timmy's mom, Helen (Carrie-Anne Moss), who, as an escape from of her rude, zombie-phobic husband (Dylan Baker), develops some very human feelings for the household zombie help.

The best part about Fido are the zombies themselves, with Billy Connolly giving a great performance as Fido. Even though he's never given an opportunity to speak, Connolly convincingly comes across as kind and life-loving despite his zombie-ness. In creating the look of the 1950s, the film boasts impressively bright colors and neat furniture design. This, combined with elaborate costumes, provides a surreal backdrop for a fantastical plot. Thankfully Currie never gets too sentimental with his script, and maintains a satirical tone throughout, throwing in a severed limb whenever things risk getting to weepy.

Details

Language: English
Country: Canada
Release date: 31 January 2007
Runtime: 93 min

Cast and Crew

Carrie-Anne Moss as Helen Robinson in Fido
Carrie-Anne Moss

as Helen Robinson

Billy Connolly as Fido in Fido
Billy Connolly

as Fido

Tim Blake Nelson as Mr. Theopolis in Fido
Tim Blake Nelson

as Mr. Theopolis

Photos

Fido (2006)
Fido (2006)

Clips

Fido
Fido: Official Trailer

Critics Reviews

TV Guide
It's just a clever, pointed little fable about the price of complacent conformity, slavish worship of the status quo, and trading freedom for the illusion of safety, wrapped in a sugary-sweet, Jordan-almond-colored coating that looks good enough to...
Rolling Stone
Director Andrew Currie is better at laughs than scares, but he can’t sustain either as Fido runs out of steam in the final stretch. Till then, it’s fiendish fun.

Users Reviews

This is a modern film, but there are no minorities present, unless you consider the zombies illegal immigrants. Worth consideration, but otherwise the film was flagrant and gaudy in theme. The line on the front of the video says "good dead are hard...
We've all seen zombie movies but what would the World be like many years after they appeared? Great fun from start to finish.
Likely to see
Not for me

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