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"Movie Review: The Fantastic Mr. Fox"

4 Comments -

1 – 4 of 4
Blogger Ryan McNeil said...

Question - a friend of mine who brought her four younger kids to see this movie had a bit of an issue with the fact that the term "cussin" is used so often in the story.

I gave my thoughts on it during my podcast, but what say you to such a detail?

BTW - Totally agree, definitely one of Anderson's better flicks, while not quite his very best.

December 12, 2009 at 12:10 AM

Blogger Unknown said...

I did question if all the 'cussin' was proper for children. I didn't come up with an answer, but I think when it comes to kids there shouldn't be any doubt. Right?
I'm going to check out your podcast...

December 12, 2009 at 12:37 AM

Blogger Jake said...

I don't see why saying the word "cuss" is so terrible. I mean, the average parent uses the actual swear words around a kid; is being clever such a threat?

I'd probably rank this right under Tenenbaums as my favorite of his. That's the only one that completely won me over but this one came close.

December 12, 2009 at 1:33 AM

Blogger Adam Zanzie said...

Most surprising to me about Fantastic Mr. Fox were Anderson's references to classic film moments. There's a Welles reference (Michael Gambon's father does a Charles Foster Kane-style wrecking of his toolshed); a Nicholas Ray reference (the shrew quotes Dean's Jim Stark by complaining that Fox's arguments with his wife go nowhere); a Pakula reference (the secret messages are pulled from All the President's Men); and, best of all, a Truffaut reference: the Day for Night theme by Cole Porter plays during the waterfall scene.

Lovely film all around, too.

December 21, 2009 at 3:40 AM

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