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Fido

  • 2006
  • R
  • 1h 33m
IMDb RATING
6.7/10
31K
YOUR RATING
Billy Connolly in Fido (2006)
Theatrical Trailer from Lionsgate
Play trailer1:39
1 Video
49 Photos
Dark ComedyParodySatireZombie HorrorComedyDramaHorrorSci-Fi

In a society where humanity has narrowly won a war against a zombie outbreak and technology allows for zombies to be used as working slaves, a young boy's close friendship with his family's ... Read allIn a society where humanity has narrowly won a war against a zombie outbreak and technology allows for zombies to be used as working slaves, a young boy's close friendship with his family's household zombie becomes problematic.In a society where humanity has narrowly won a war against a zombie outbreak and technology allows for zombies to be used as working slaves, a young boy's close friendship with his family's household zombie becomes problematic.

  • Director
    • Andrew Currie
  • Writers
    • Robert Chomiak
    • Andrew Currie
    • Dennis Heaton
  • Stars
    • Kesun Loder
    • Billy Connolly
    • Carrie-Anne Moss
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.7/10
    31K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Andrew Currie
    • Writers
      • Robert Chomiak
      • Andrew Currie
      • Dennis Heaton
    • Stars
      • Kesun Loder
      • Billy Connolly
      • Carrie-Anne Moss
    • 116User reviews
    • 123Critic reviews
    • 70Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 13 wins & 15 nominations total

    Videos1

    Fido
    Trailer 1:39
    Fido

    Photos49

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    Top cast48

    Edit
    Kesun Loder
    Kesun Loder
    • Timmy Robinson
    • (as K'Sun Ray)
    Billy Connolly
    Billy Connolly
    • Fido
    Carrie-Anne Moss
    Carrie-Anne Moss
    • Helen Robinson
    David Kaye
    David Kaye
    • Narrator
    • (voice)
    Jan Skorzewski
    • Eating Zombie
    Kevin Tyell
    • Zombie's Victim
    Andrew Parkin
    • Dr. Hrothgar Geiger
    • (as Andy Parkin)
    Lynn Pendleton
    • 1940's Mother
    Gary Slater
    • Father Zombie
    Taylor Petri
    • Little Girl
    Glenn Richards
    • Vicious Zombie
    Raphael Kepinski
    Raphael Kepinski
    • Collar Light Zombie
    Carl-James Kalbfleisch
    • Child Zombie
    Tiffany Lyndall-Knight
    Tiffany Lyndall-Knight
    • Miss Mills
    Alexia Fast
    Alexia Fast
    • Cindy Bottoms
    Henry Czerny
    Henry Czerny
    • Mr. Bottoms
    Aaron Brown
    • Roy Fraser
    Brandon Olds
    • Stan Fraser
    • Director
      • Andrew Currie
    • Writers
      • Robert Chomiak
      • Andrew Currie
      • Dennis Heaton
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews116

    6.730.8K
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    Featured reviews

    9ccthemovieman-1

    Not What It First Appears - An Absurdly-Funny & Touching Film

    When you see the cover of the DVD you're convinced this is some Class B cheesy cheapie, a film made for $1,000 in somebody's backyard.

    Wrong!

    This is quality material and really good. It's a comedy and a clever one at that. It also is very touching in spots, with a nice spot of kindness. The production values are very good (this looks excellent), the actors are known, the film's direction and sets are great. It's amazing. Who would have thought?

    Carrie-Ann Moss, playing against-type, is terrific, as"Helen Robinson," the June Cleaver-like wife; Billy Connolly is great as the grunting good-hearted zombie "Fido;" Tim Blake Nelson ("Mr. Theopolis") is a hoot is the neighbor with the sexy zombie girlfriend "Tammy," and Henry Czerny and Dylan Baker as dads (check) are excellent, too K'Sun Ray as young "Timmy Robinson," shouldn't be overlooked, either. In fact, he probably has more lines in the movie than anyone.

    If I explain the story it will sound so stupid that few of you would watch it. You'll just have to take the word of the people here who liked it and found it to be a very, very pleasant surprise. You need a dark sense of humor, though; an appreciation of the absurd.
    9Smells_Like_Cheese

    Pleasantville meets Night of the Living Dead

    OK, I didn't know what to expect when I saw the cover to Fido, honestly when I came across it in the video store I was tempted to rent this movie, but nothing about it really grabbed my attention. But when I was looking around in Netflix, they were advertising this like crazy if I liked "goofy" scary movies, so I figured to just give it a shot. I'm so glad that I did watch it, this was just a great movie, it was absolutely hilarious and so charming to watch. Like I said, it's Pleasantville meets Night of the Living Dead, it's just a great concept, what does happen after a mega zombie attack? As we see in another zombie comedy, Shaun of the Dead, they have fun by making the zombies left over as "handy" citizens. This is a very overlooked horror/comedy movie, I think a lot of people were just so blown away with Shaun of the Dead that this got the boot. But it's a great story and the cast was perfect and made this into just a really funny movie.

    In a 1950s alternate universe where radiation from space has turned the dead into zombies. This radiation still plagues humanity, as all those who die after the original contamination turn into the undead. In order to continue living normal lives, communities are fenced with the help of a governing corporation named Zomcon. Zomcon provides collars with accompanying remote controls to control the zombies' hunger for flesh so as to use them as slaves or servants. In the town of Willard, a housewife ,Helen, buys a zombie in spite of her husband Bill's zombie phobia. Their son, Timmy, befriends the zombie, naming him "Fido". One day Fido's collar malfunctions and he kills their next door neighbor, who turns into a zombie. Timmy "kills" the zombified neighbor. When a pair of local bullies are blamed for the missing neighbor, they capture Fido and Timmy. Helen comes and rescues Timmy and Fido from the bullies and they try to forget about the whole thing. Several days later, the neighbor's body is found and the murder is traced back to Fido, who is taken away to Zomcon where the public is told he will be destroyed. Timmy learns through a friend that Fido is simply working in a factory at Zomcon. Timmy sets out to rescue him with the help from his neighbor with a zombie girlfriend in hopes to get Fido back.

    I really do highly recommend this movie if you get the chance to see it, it's so silly but a lot of fun. Billy Connelly did a great job as Fido and really brought, no pun intended, a lot of life into the character. I think the scene that made me laugh the most was when Timmy has to burry the old lady that Fido attacked and killed, his last words to her were so funny, "you weren't really nice, but you liked flowers, so…" and he buries her in the garden. Not to mention the neighbor with the zombie girlfriend, sick, disturbing, wrong, but classic laughs. I still love how even though this is like the Leave It To Beaver-esquire type of world, there still is a lot of gore in the movie. So if you do have a chance to see Fido, take it, I promise some good laughs.

    9/10
    9doctorgonzo71

    Zomcom

    At a risk of sounding slightly sacrilegious, on first viewing I'm kind of inclined to put this right up on a par with 'Shaun of the Dead'. Now, given I view Simon Pegg as an unquestionable comedy genius, I realise this is a rather big claim. And to what extent you agree with that last statement may be a good preliminary gauge of whether 'Fido' will appeal to you.

    In a way the comedy picks up where 'Shaun' left off, except we're back in the original 1950s Living Dead-era stereotypical middle-American small town. The Zombie Wars are over and zombies themselves are becoming more well-adjusted, useful members of the community. This, so we're informed at the outset, is largely thanks to the scientific advances made by the good people at Zomcom - a nice play on romantic comedy perhaps?

    The beauty of the film lies in its dead-pan depiction of a respectable neighbourhood maintaining core values while making a place for zombies and the special hazards they pose. The charm and balance with which it does this is near enough perfect. Themes you might expect from a more mainstream kitsch comedy come through - the veneer of good clean living, keeping up appearances, repressed emotion, muddled parental values, social decorum and the plight of the alienated individual.

    It's a story told with happy heart and wide appeal that is brought to life vividly by the film's all-round strong cast. It's one of those works where it really shows through that everyone involved got a kick out of taking part. It's also fun imagining what Billy Connelly learning his script must have been like...

    So in conclusion, it is probable you will appreciate the humour of this film unless your father tried to eat you.
    8roland-104

    Wanton homicide, zombies, slavery, bullying: yet it all makes for zany light comedy here

    Set in a middle class neighborhood in the imaginary town of Willard in the 1950s, this dark comedy with a light touch toys with such American obsessions as gun mania and violence, materialism and keeping up with the Joneses, fear of others, slavery, golf, and the disposing of the dead. Yes, it all sounds a bit heavy, but trust me on this, it's nearly as light as a feather.

    Zombies are featured prominently among the characters. Crucial questions arise, such as: who will become a zombie (90% of the Willard folks choose this final path, while only 10% prefer a traditional funeral)? Who owns how many Zombies to do their bidding like robots (they've become a mark of social status)? And, what is the range of possible relationships that can be worked out between the living and the sort of reincarnated dead?

    Somehow, director Andrew Currie, who also co-wrote the lively screenplay (with Robert Chomiak and Dennis Heaton), keeps this improbable material percolating along for an hour and a half without once faltering for want of a good laugh. A super cast helps: Carrie-Anne Moss, Billy Connolly, Dylan Baker, Henry Czerny, Tim Blake Nelson, Mary Black and Sonja Bennett are the principals, aided by young K'Sun Ray as Timmy, the innocent kid with a good heart who acts as fair witness to all the lunacy of the grownups. (Having seen her only in "Memento" and "The Matrix," I had no idea that Ms. Moss had such fine comedienne chops.)

    The production design and music are exquisitely 50s, to a tee. Maybe this one isn't for everybody. It surely will be a hard film to beat for my annual Bizarro Award. But intelligent comedies that stay funny from start to finish are among the hardest won achievements in movie-making. For me anyway, "Fido" is a hoot! My grades: 8.5/10 (A-) (Seen on 01/30/07)
    9muffingoddess38

    I wish I didn't have to wait for this to come out in the US...

    I suppose the ultimate curse of attending the Toronto Film Festival is your release date time table get messed up. Quite frankly, I'm just happy Fido got picked up for US distribution. In any case...

    Ever seen Shaun of the Dead? Good. How about Lassie? Able to reconcile the two? Well, if you can your name might be Andrew Currie, Canadian helmer of the first ever family themed zombie comedy, or zomedy. (Seriously, that's what the press book in Toronto called it.) Though not as violent, dry, or British as Shaun of the Dead, Fido remains true to its roots: a devotion to old 50s black and white television including both Lassie and the infamous sci-fi pulp that was being pumped out during the period.

    Fido's talented headliners (Carrie Anne Moss, Billy Connelly, Dylan Baker, and Tim Blake Nelson) stand as a testament to the brilliance of the script. The film explores all the implications of its premise: a world where zombies have been converted to servants because of the sheer number of them due to a strange accident. What would you use your new undead servant for? A butler? Manual labor? A pet? Unspeakable acts? Fido tackles all these possibilities in a sweet and surprisingly classy way, with much thanks to the work of Connelly (as one of said zombies) and young TV actor K'Sun Ray, who seems at times to be a better young Elijah Wood than the young Elijah Wood was.

    If you're expecting another Shaun of the Dead, don't waste your time. There's not nearly enough gore and pokes at the genre to satisfy you and you'll just leave the theater bitter and depressed. But if you're willing to take a look at what happens to Shaun of the Dead when it jumps across the lake, you're in for a treat. Think of Fido as the sensitive, more often beaten up little brother to Shaun of the Dead's rebellious loser, and you're starting to get the drift. If you like (or at least tolerate) zombies, small children, and loads of deadpan satire, Fido's the film for you. If that's not the case....well, you know the drill. Just hit 'em square between the eyes.

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    Related interests

    Phoebe Waller-Bridge and Sian Clifford in Fleabag (2016)
    Dark Comedy
    Bill Pullman, John Candy, Joan Rivers, Daphne Zuniga, and Lorene Yarnell Jansson in Spaceballs (1987)
    Parody
    Peter Sellers in Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb (1964)
    Satire
    Pedro Pascal in Long, Long Time (2023)
    Zombie Horror
    Will Ferrell in Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy (2004)
    Comedy
    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama
    Mia Farrow in Rosemary's Baby (1968)
    Horror
    James Earl Jones and David Prowse in Star Wars: Episode V - The Empire Strikes Back (1980)
    Sci-Fi

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Sir Billy Connolly was reportedly very upset that the role required him to shave his beard. He described it as, "ripping out my fuc-king personality."
    • Goofs
      While washing the car with Fido and Timmy, when Helen first brings out the drinks there is a shot with Fido's eye make-up clearly missing. In the next shot the make-up has been reapplied.
    • Quotes

      Little Girl: Grandpa's fallen and he's getting up!

    • Crazy credits
      Any similarity to actual persons, living, dead or undead is purely unintentional.
    • Connections
      Edited into Cent une tueries de zombies (2012)
    • Soundtracks
      Compulsion Opening & Theme
      Written by Trevor Duncan

      Licensed Courtesy of The Music People Ltd. and Boosey & Hawkes (SOCAN)

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    FAQ20

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • March 16, 2007 (Canada)
    • Country of origin
      • Canada
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Mi mascota es un zombie
    • Filming locations
      • Kelowna, British Columbia, Canada
    • Production companies
      • Lionsgate
      • Anagram Pictures
      • Astral Media
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $8,000,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $304,533
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $10,203
      • Jun 17, 2007
    • Gross worldwide
      • $426,224
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 33m(93 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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