DVDs HiDef CDs Video Games Books Magazines Bargain Books Media Storage Cell Phones Fun Stuff Posters
     Search      

New Soundtracks!
Current Box Office Hits!

The Dark Knight (Limited Edition) [Digipak]
Only: $16.98

The Dark Knight
Only: $13.97

Mamma Mia!
Only: $12.97

Fido
Enlarge Image

Why pay:  $14.95?
Our Price:

$10.31

You Save: $4.64
Add to Wish List
Email a friend



Fido
Widescreen
Director:  Andrew Currie
Year: 2007
Runtime: 92
Rating: R (MPAA)
Language:  Original: English; Subtitled: English, Spanish
Color: Y
Closed Captioned: N
UPC: 031398218807
Item Number: LGE021880
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.

Theatrical Release: June 15, 2007

  Similar Titles
Why pay: 
$19.95?
Our Price:
Why pay: 
$29.95?
Our Price:
Why pay: 
$19.95?
Our Price:
$12.06
Buy Dawn of the Dead [UMD] Now!
$18.22
Buy Dawn of the Dead [Blu-ray Disc] Now!
$12.14
Buy Dawn of the Dead Now!



Track your previous orders.


View or change your orders in Your Account.


Questions about your orders?



Shipping rates, timeframes & policies.


Need to Return an item? Check out our Returns Policy first.



New customer? Click here to learn about searching, browsing and shopping at our store.


Forgot your password? Click here.




MRC - Merchant Risk Council