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Review: Yellowbrickroad
Reviews
Fido
Dark, potent, gory
By
TOM MEEK
|
July 3, 2007
FIDO
" alt="photo of 'FIDO'">
3.0
Stars
FIDO: A little bit of everything silly.
At the end of
Shaun of the Dead
, after the streets have been cleared of flesh-eating hordes, a best-friend-turned-zombie is chained up in a back yard as sort of a pet. If you carried on from there, set your movie in a Cleaver-happy 1950s enclave, and mixed in a McCarthy-esque political climate that perpetuates fear, you’d have
Fido
. In the aftermath of the great Zombie Wars, order is maintained by a Halliburton-like conglomerate called ZomCon, and well-to-dos have the undead as slave labor and servants held in check by ZomCon radio control collars. Timmy (K’Sun Ray) is a schoolyard outcast who bonds with the family’s new walking-dead title butler (Billy Connolly in a film-making performance). But what about the creepy sexual tension that develops between Timmy’s mom (Carrie-Anne Moss) and Fido while dad (Dylan Baker) looms as a backbiting pissant? And that rumor about Fido’s eating the next-door neighbor? The whole shebang may sound silly, but director Andrew Currie stews together gore, social commentary, screwball camp, and dark comedy with savory potency.
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Walden Media, the movie production company behind Charlotte’s Web and The Chronicles of Narnia , works its adaptation alchemy on Katherine Paterson’s Newbery winner with the usual middling results. Watch the trailer for Bridge to Terabithia (QuickTime)
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