Movie Review: Fantastic Mr. Fox

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As I watched Fantastic Mr. Fox and gradually sensed the darkness of the theater lose out to the autumn-colored, classy, stop motion shenanigans on screen, I began to accept that every silhouette in the audience—fat and small, rich and me—was dressed in ship-shape, semi-formal attire. I pictured moms silently imagining themselves speaking in snooty English accents and serving cups of Earl Grey. And kids ages five through nine on the verge of zzz’ing in handsome jackets of tweed and corduroy; mildly stimulated by what equates to a visually dazzling hipster Sunday School lesson taught with Adderall on its gums and Tryptophan in its belly.

In contrast to Spike Jonze’s Where the Wild Things Areitself a furry and visionary 2009 adaptation of a famous kid’s book about nonconformity—Wes Anderson’s Fox focuses foremost on family via adult characters. Whereas Wild Things united male Eighties Babies with its look at psychological distress, a side effect birthed by so much of that decade’s parental divorce and separation, Fox unites families of the aughts with an increasingly rare and welcome air of sophistication. One is a film about adults-as-wild-animals suitable for families, the other is a film about a child amidst wild animals suitable for would-be adults.

Both films played hearty roles in the recognition of 2009 as a superb and original year for film. But it’s too easy to forget that both were also preceded by worrisome, pre-release reputations; the hum of negative online buzz was aggressively stirred by each project’s elitist-seeming stylistic risk-taking (and later supported by insider gossip or, sigh, test screenings). Here we are post-release as moviegoers, though, and both Fox and Wild Things are critically successful and amongst the best films of the year. It’s funny: right when so many of us were ready to throw two of our most “too hip” directors under the bus, these guys embrace artistic maturity through accessibility…with all of their idiosyncratic signatures somehow intact.

The cynic inside me says that Fox and Wild Things are selfish films made to impress and show-off creative carte blanche to more cynical, less connected creative types; but this jaded view evaporates when one optimistically looks around and forward. I feel like this is what Anderson and Jonze have done, thus creating films that will nudge talented, isolated youths and later inspire them to never compromise when it’s their turn. In generational terms, Wes Anderson and Spike Jonze have respectively, done Roald Dahl and Maurice Sendak proud.

And, maybe, just maybe, these films signal the beginning of the end to that fucking aughts archetype: the aimless man-child. Perhaps by way of directorial example and the spirit of ingenuity at decade’s end, these works signify the arrival of the youthful, responsible-enough, creatively determined dad in pop culture. As our modern world continues to crumble, there has never been less reason to not sell out and not tune out.

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One for Dahl

What worried me when I first began seeing images from Fantastic Mr. Fox was the impression that it would leave me cold, that its stop-motion, animated taxidermy would result in a pointless, throwback counterpart mirroring the obsessive, power-driven exercises synonymous with George Lucas and his computer generated Star Wars prequels. Picturing Wes Anderson holed up in Paris and and directing the film remotely with Draconian commands like, “You move that goddamn hair half-an-inch you shriveled fruit or that’s your tush!” made me shudder. I also found it surprising, if not shocking, how few the instances I read beforehand that compared Fox and Tim Burton and Henry Selick’s stop-motion adaptation of Roald Dahl’s James and the Giant Peach, made for Disney and released in 1996.

I remember seeing Peach, desperately wanting to like (and not just appreciate) its painstaking animation. But ultimately it took months to shrug off my disappointment. (That Henry Selick had a surprise, stop-motion hit with Coraline this year should be noted, but will not be discussed further herein.) I was let down by how Peach seemed preoccupied with the mechanics of stop motion as to soak up most of the delicious wit and tongue-dripping imagery swimming in Roald Dahl’s words. Leading up to the release of Fox, those feelings resurfaced.

And so did the overwhelming memories I have of reading Dahl’s novel, Fantastic Mr. Fox, for the first time. It was the first book to literally make my mouth water, so irresistible were Dahl’s endless, corrupted-epicurean descriptions of stolen and devoured fowl by the titular character. He wrote like a man possessed by hilarious, vicarious pleasure in having young boys secretly rediscover (or, I imagine, if read within an overtly religious household, discover) a primal bond by way of the carnivorous pillaging of a sly fox.

“Oh my cuss.”

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Immediately upon seeing the thousands of real hairs and furs in motion on screen, I felt that Wes Anderson’s unorthodox choice and tone for animation—more so than his take on Dahl’s story—was an embodiment of that youthful sensation. All my worries melted away in awe. On screen, Dahl’s subversive ideas and go-getter love of life are fully realized by Anderson and his insanely talented team, even in small scenes like those showing how the Fox Family eats. But Dahl’s man’s-man spirit and dark humor is also ingrained in the smaller details. Faithful to the book, the confident, masculine Mr. Fox succumbs to his former wild ways by relieving farmers of their tasty birds. But in the film we connect with Mr. Fox’s familiar hunger as a character by noticing how the fur on Fox’s face is brushed oh so slightly, as if by a breeze.

Some viewers feel these brushes are a hat tip to and from the animators, sure, but in my mind, they are from the brush of Life. Mr. Fox is a dancer and a hunter. And the charming, hirsute twitches are a subtle reminder that we humans, in addition to messily partaking in the movie experience, messily partake in the same gross food chain as Mr. Fox. Our smiles are as full of teeth as Mr. Fox’s, hiding a tongue that wants to lash its chops. And like the generations of smart, young kids who read Dahl’s book(s), a new one will realize in the theater that the disguise of civility is what defines adults most of all. Mom might not get it. But for a reason she can’t quite verbalize she really loves the Rat, so it’s all good.

However, arguably unlike the work of Dahl, Wes Anderson’s vision sees adults—both the foxes on screen and the humans in the audience—given the benefit of the doubt. Dressed every bit the dandy that Anderson aspires to be in photo shoots, Mr. Fox maintains his feral desires with admirable, upright posture. After an alarming wake-up call, he finds stable work as a newspaper columnist—an ironic, wistful touch in 2009—and is a fair parent, if adrift in former athletic, unethical prowess. He’s aware of his tendencies, but hasn’t thrown them out or stored them away. Perfectly voiced by George Clooney, Mr. Fox is every bit as solid and alpha-proud as a Heisman Trophy, but we sense him losing interest as a relic of superiority. Minor delusion seeps in from the corners of his domesticated fox hole, and it’s a kick when, later, he’s literally driven up a wall. (There is a fun, involuntary pause after this spazzy wall-crawl that nails the confused and dizzied satisfaction exhibited by dumb animals.)

Mr. Fox is also a natural born thief, and his inevitable relapses are punchy metaphors for womanizing, cheap thrills, and even alcoholism, the vices of man implied in Dahl’s writings for kids (and explored in his writing for adults). It’s a character that Frank Sinatra would have voiced, and noting some political parallels below, Clooney is not only the ideal voice for Mr. Fox, but the ideal modern star. For a children’s film, Mr. Fox is far from a cookie-cutter protagonist and Anderson plays his ethical murkiness for quiet laughs. Expressive as his eyes are, even the occasional tears that well up inside Mr.  Fox’s are temporary and belie his ego. Mrs. Fox knows his ways all too well (as voiced by Meryl Streep, amazing but underused). And even though she had her wild days as well (shades of proto-swinging jokes), she confesses to his face that their marriage was a mistake. Alas, she loves him.

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Wes Anderson Releases The Fur Album at The Right Time

Wes Anderson has become so synonymous with manicured, color coordinated, Criterion-approved but incredibly divisive works that he’s practically a brand. However, in the latter half of the decade, even many of his adamant fans professed concern about diminishing returns and unfulfilled, longing expectations. It’s become a cliche in social circles to do so, to such an extent that culturally, Anderson has become a Hollywood version of Weezer. His passionate fans seem to perpetually revert back to their love of Bottle Rocket (The Blue Album) and Rushmore (Pinkerton) and are forced to view everything else under a line of demarcation. Anderson has also risked limiting himself to movies about “the other half.” In making a family film that vividly creates a hearth out of the working class lifestyle of Mr. Fox and his family, Anderson took a smart detour that packs resonance with its themes of survival, selflessness, and happiness. And more relevance still.

Fox’s greedy and determined adversary, the monopolistic farmer, Franklin Bean (Michael Gambon), is a well-to-do human that cherishes and lives for the hunt. Bean won’t stop drilling an exceedingly massive hole in the ground until he gets what he wants (and what he wants is Mr. Fox, a symbol to go up over his Mantle of Power). Bean’s an angry man with access to what appears to be endless corporate resources and manpower; whereas Mr. Fox simply depends on his older, Latin-admired cunning and home turf advantage. Alongside family and peers, Mr. Fox digs neverending holes and tunnels. Bean spares no expense in attempting to flush him out. Call in the reserves! Guess who wins in the end.

In the film’s dazzling, madcap efforts to express Mr. Fox’s passion and hunger of life, I began to recognize my growing appetite for animated, family films that are not only created by the human hand but unmistakably and unapologetically appear to be. As the holidays near—with their annual airings of Rankin-Bass and Charlie Brown Christmas films—I can’t help but feel that Fantastic Mr. Fox has tapped into a growing sentiment about animation and family films that really found its footing this year. In recent weeks and months we’ve witnessed a chic resurgence of Jim Henson’s Muppets (also: WTWTA); the aforementioned success of Coraline; the appearance of Sesame Street in the headlines; and on the indie front, growing buzz for the Belgian animated film A Town Called Panic and for the acclaimed animatronic documentary The Rock-afire Explosion. In my mind, Anderson’s film consisting of thousands of “visible” fingerprints, real hairs and tea leaves, has won out in face of the grand cinematic finale of illusion said to be enabled to us this winter by computers, 3D effects, and $300 million plus with James Cameron’s Avatar.

As I compile my best films of 2009, I do dig Pixar and think Up is one of their best, but deep inside, I feel a much more urgent and profound connection to Fantastic Mr. Fox. It’s not simply a matter of preference for eye candy or personal taste, either. Or a seasonal bias. This aging and overpowering notion in pop-culture and the marketplace that computer animation rules all and is the best way to get moviegoers’ and families’ asses in seats ignores something vital: the love humans will forever have for seeing artists get their hands dirty in a literal sense.

It’s a love created by antiquated habit and necessity, sure. But I would compare my difference in affection as a person to Up and Fantastic Mr. Fox to watching sunlight reflect off a beach ball on a perfect day and staring deep into a camp fire and never getting bored. There is a certain truth for why this latter feeling is more engaging. And by going against the odds to remind us, Wes Anderson has made the best animated film of the year and a perennial classic. (The only one ever to feature champagne bubbles and rabies made of cotton.) Raise a paw in the air and support it.

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Hunter Stephenson can be reached at h.attila/gmail and on Twitter.

About the Author

  • ericlarson
    Good write-up. I really look forward to checking this out next week.
  • DeadlyPorpoise
    Great review, and I look forward to seeing this when it hits NZ....probably sometime in the year 2075.

    PS - Dear Hunter (ha)

    Please don't bold words unless there's some special emphasis you'd like to make. It makes for a very distracting read!

    Cheers!

    Internet Pedant

    xx


    Update. Released in NZ January 7th, 2010. Frak.
  • Hi. Thanks for the comment. It is /Film policy to bold the titles of all movies and the names of performers in reviews published on the site. It is also policy to bold them on all instances unlike the policy for news items. In this case, I don't think the bolds were detrimental to the reading experience, but thanks for chiming in.
  • DeadlyPorpoise
    Firstly, thanks for taking the time to respond - one of the reasons this site beats AICN et al is the dedication of the editorial staff. The reviews and contributors are uniformly excellent and I salute you all. Even Quigles.

    Re my point about bolding - I understand the constraints of editorial policies all too well, but I'd push back a little on this. Bolding the names of the film under review, key points etc is fine, but does lead the casual reader to think that these may exist as word with special meaning or functionality...e.g. tag cloud entries, hyperlinks etc. Also, I'm not sure it should extend to the names of characters in the plot?

    However, I'm not wanting to critisize too much - just attempt to give my opinion on a subject that I feel I can contribute too!

    Thanks again !
  • Sockin
    Saw this last night and I really dug it. It definitely puts a dent in Up's chances for best animated movie Oscar.
  • patrickoriley
    Except not really.
  • @Sockin I agree that it should win the Oscar over Up, however I don't see the buzz right now from general audiences to put it over the top. Hopefully Fox Searchlight begins to market it in the weeks ahead as the classic it will be recognized as in the yrs ahead.

    Positive reviews and praise---including from the staff at /Film---are now there for them to work with.

    Thus far, the marketing has been timid and unsure of who the audience is---it feels exclusive, like a growing-pains indie. One of the great things about the marketing for Where the Wild Things Are was that it conveyed the notion, and rightly so, that Spike Jonze is now a name director in America outside of the indie and college set. Anderson is well enough known (spotty record aside) to have his latest works marketed as event films.

  • Kyle C.
    Love the review, couldn't agree more! I saw this movie last night and I loved it. I had a smile on my face the whole 90 minutes. It really is the first mainstream animated film I think to bring such a quirky and funny sense of humanity without feeling schmaltzy or corny. I also loved that they said the word "cuss" in place of any actual cuss word. I loved the animation style, it really brought me back to my childhood and watching stuff like Gumby and Rudolph the Red Nosed Reindeer. I loved all the characters and the voice work was probably the best I've ever heard. My favorite character had to be the Rat that looked and sounded like he just stepped out of West Side Story, swithblade and all. This just beat Up for my #1 animated film of '09 and moved Coraline back to 3rd place.
  • Hunter - You just had to throw a knock at Avatar in there didn't ya? lol
  • existenz
    I also enjoyed the film. I really didn't like Life Aquatic or Darjeeling Limited, but Fantastic Mr. Fox won me over.
  • vader182
    Fantastically well written review, Hunter. Spot on! Up made me tear up at certain points, and it was certainly really fun and hilarious too, but... the pure magic found in every hairy and demolished piece of food our fantastic Mr. Fox could get his paws on simply was not there. Highly recommend it!
  • richCie
    what a brilliant review...
    i'd not been that excited by this (even if Darjeeling Limited is one of my favourite films) i keep hearing nothing but praise for this - i've missed it on its cinema release here in U.K but the student cinema at my uni are showing it next semester so i'll be sure to go along - especially as its free for me :D
  • rogerbusby
    I don't know...if there weren't any chubby teenage girls with chubbies in line i don't think I'm interested.
  • MickJ
    Just got back from seeing it, great movie and great review. Love the Weezer comparison. Too bad Raditude isn't very good. I thought the movie might be too whimsical but it was pretty much pitch perfect. The digging scenes in particular were hilarious.
  • Gomer
    Yeah I thought it fit right in with the rest of Wes Anderson's stuff. Distinctive static camera, hilarious one-liners, and characters with a constant knack for mischief. I loved it. If you're a fan of his work, you'll love this as well, but I probably don't need to tell you that if you're a fan of Wes Anderson.
  • Soundwave_17
    "After an alarming wake-up call, he finds stable work as a newspaper columnist—an ironic, wistful touch in 2009" -if you listen to Mr. Fox he mentions his years in high School and it was during the 70's so that should put the film set in the early 80's since he was only 7 years old.
  • janson
    the author didn't say the movie was set in our year.

    brilliant review. best i've read here.
  • Joe
    They also didn't specify whether woodland high school goes over human years or fox years. We're all looking into this too much.
  • Soundwave_17
    That's true. lol
  • roboroller
    Although it is interesting (if not relevant) to note that the people and animals had fully functional modern looking cell phones...so...who knows.
  • The Badger also had a new iMac in his office.
  • brian
    Great review. Happy to have read it, and my appetite is further whetted to see it asap.
  • guy
    The animation was really very poor. The 'retro' stop-motion is simply a facade.
  • street
    How so? This isn't a disagreement or even a troll attempt. I'm just interested to know why you (and others) think this is poor animation?
  • Swarley
    I don't think that using an older technological style like stop-motion is really a "facade". I mean, sure, it's not as streamlined or perfect as animation is today, but that doesn't mean it still can't be used. Especially since certain developments (switching from animatronics to CGI pops into mind) sometimes don't actually look any better, they're just cheaper. Unless you're saying that the direction behind the animation is what is so flawed, in which case I guess I didn't look into it that much.
  • Abelle
    I don't know if this is what the OP was referring to, but I find the particular style of the stop-motion animation used to be very off-putting. Just from what I've seen in the trailers looks so clunky and jerky, and kind of comes off as a bit unprofessional/really, really low budget to myself. I adore stop-motion, but the particular way it's executed in Fox I find very visually unappealing.
  • street
    Compared to what? You adore stop motion, but don't like this? So I'm curious? What do you consider to be good stop motion work? I appreciate any feedback!
  • zebrat
    i had similar concerns from watching the previews but the movie looks wonderful. i, for one, loved this movie. (and i think you may want to look the word 'facade' up in the ole dictionary).
  • zebrat
    errr, sorry abelle i was responding to guy not you.
  • Swarley
    I think you should still give it a chance though. I had my reservations about it at first for various reasons, but in the end I fell in love with the animation as well as the direction and writing. I understand that people have different tastes for what animation they find the most appealing, but I'd still urge you to go out and see it, if only to affirm the opinions that you already have.
  • I was also weary of the animation in the trailers but after about 60 seconds of this film I absolutely fell in love with it.
  • yer
    I'm really not a fan of your reviews Hunter (or your posts in general). You ramble on way to much.
  • Fantastic review, man. Our sensibilities really seem to align with regard to Mr. Anderson. My anticipation of this film is only growing, but it doesn't open in Australia until the 7th of January! Arghhgf.
  • sauce_1
    I too loved this movie. It was just nearly pitch perfect.
    It took me about 24 hours to really mull it over, but when all is said and done: I agree, I liked this better than UP. And I'm a giant Pixar fan boy. As soon as I walked out of the theater I thought to myself, I could go see that again right now and be just as happy. What a treat.
  • bateman
    Someone get this reviewer an editor. STAT!

    You've referenced every film under the sun. And you made this review sound like you had to research and write it for a painstaking college course.
  • roboroller
    Agreed, but Hunter's writing style usually ALWAYS reads like someone trying really really hard to get an A in a college writing course.
  • Dingo
    Interesting bit of trolling here Hunter. Somebody doesn't like you and keeps logging in with new names. Wonderful review though! Loved it.
    Too bad you left out Tenenbaums in your analogy, I consider that quite the masterpiece.
  • frank
    Excited to check it out, great review Hunter
  • Swarley
    While I agree that this review was a little long-winded and wordy, I think overall it relayed all of my own personal opinions about the film coming out of it, so it's great to see that we're on the same page.
  • I think kids will love it. They may not follow much of the dialogue, but the story is very straight forward and the movie is very visual. A lot of the humor is based on sight gags and phyisical humor. Think of the old Looney Tunes cartoons, or maybe Rocky and Bullwinkle–a lot of the topical humor goes right over the heads of children, but kids love it anyway. Kids are used to living in a world they don’t understand. The movie moves at a pretty fast pace, and it has talking animals. That should be enough to keep the kids interested.
  • Christopher
    Oh my god there is no reason for this review to be so long, drawn out, and pointless.

    Movie was quirky, visually beautiful, and hilarious. Enough said.
  • Was it quirky? I totally missed that in my review. Thanks!

    How quirky was it, you know, compared to Juno? Make a pie graph and die.
  • You rule!
  • Brian
    Something tells me we wouldnt be visiting this site, if thats what the reviews consisted of. Do you have a blog we should read instead?
  • sauce_1
    I've been thinking about it more. FMF and UP are both great but, FMF has the edge in a very important way. The comparison I've come up with is like live music. UP is like the extremely well done Trans-Siberian Orchestra. Everything is pitch perfect and blows you away when you hear it live. You connect to the music, but you're not making a personal connection. FMF however has the feel of some little acoustic band sitting down in a cozy little concert hall and playing their souls out. Really knocking it out of the park and you can't help but be blown away. But in a much different way than the large scale orchestra. It's much more natural, unrefined movie that has a way of making that personal connection.
    Go see this movie!
  • Abelle
    I'd argue that, really. While I've yet to see FMF, I felt like I could connect to Up in a lot of personal ways, both to the characters and the overall story.
  • lipslikeasukal
    Disclaimer: I haven't seen Fantastic Mr. Fox and I didn't like Tenenbaums or Zissou. Also, I loved both Coraline a little more than Up. But I also love Roald Dahl.

    Here is my impression of what I'll feel after watching the movie: What's worse than a Wes Anderson movie? A Wes Anderson movie that has George Clooney in it.

    I have to say, I don't get why animated films have to HAVE big name actors doing the voice work. Sure, it might get butts on the seats, but I really can't stand when actors do voice work and sound so much like their real life voices that it takes you out of the movie. I don't know how I'm gonna feel when I hear Clooney's smug voice coming out of a fucking (what seems to be poorly animated even for stop-motion) fox.
  • brian
    Usually i'd agree w you, but the actors, all of them, really are fantastic. Clooney especially.
  • You're disclaimer said it all. You have no idea what you're talking about as you haven't seen the film. Go write your hypothetical reviews somewhere else.
  • nicole
    i liked the film
    it was groovy

    well done foxy
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