Number Rolled: 77
Movie Name/Year: Furry
Vengeance (2010)
Tagline: He came.
He saw. They conquered.
Genre: Comedy
Length: 91
minutes
Rating: PG
Production Companies:
Summit Entertainment, Participant Media, Imagenation Abu Dhabi FZ, Robert
Simonds Productions, Furry Vengeance Productions
Executive Producer:
Mohamed Khalaf Al-Mazrouel, Brendan Fraser, Jonathan King, Ira Shuman, Jeff
Skoll
Director: Roger
Kumble
Writer: Michael
Carnes, Josh Gilbert
Actors: Brendan
Fraser, Ricky Garcia, Brooke Shields, Matt Prokop, Ken Jeong, Angela Kinsey,
Skyler Samuels, Gerry Bednob, Dee Bradley Baker, Eugene Cordero, Patrice O’Neal,
Jim Norton, Billy Bush, Samantha Bee, Alice Drummond, Toby Huss, Alexander
Chance, Rob Riggle, Wallace Shawn
Dan Sanders has moved his family out to the country to head
up the development of new housing. As they try to get used to the situation,
they find out the forest may be more aware of what’s happening than they
thought.
Selina’s Point of View:
I’ve really wanted to watch something light and fluffy for a
while now. Things have been stressful and as much as I love horror and thriller
movies, I keep rooting for something like Penguins
of Madagascar (2014) every time we roll the dice. The thing about random,
is it really doesn’t care about what I want.
So I got Furry
Vengeance following a row of darkness.
I generally enjoy Brendan Fraser (The Mummy, Breakout, HairBrained). He’s a guilty pleasure of mine.
However, in this film he felt like a bargain version of Nathan Fillion (Castle, Firefly, Slither). I don’t know
why. Maybe it’s because I was wishing Fillion was in this instead, but since it’s
one of the few films I don’t think he would be able to make better, I doubt it.
I should be clear. As a children’s movie this film didn’t
completely suck. As a family film made to include the whole family….
Let’s just say I wouldn’t really be interested in watching
it more than once.
It was like a mix of Dr.
Dolittle (1998) and Home Alone 3
(1997). It just wasn’t for me.
Cat’s Point of View:
I’d seen this movie before, with my family. I remember
thinking that it was cute, and my daughter thought that the animals were
hilarious. She was seven at the time.
Watching again, I can’t say that my opinion has changed
much. She wasn’t interested in revisiting the film; so I forged ahead on my
own.
This movie adds another over-the-top bit of camp to Brendan
Fraser’s (The Last Time, Inkheart, The
Nut Job) list of family flicks. I think he did a good job with what he had
to work with. It wasn’t too cheesy, and he had just the right amount of crazy.
I did get a good chuckle when I realized Ken Jeong (Vampires Suck, Pain & Gain, The Duff)
was in this movie. It wasn’t that his performance wasn’t memorable, I’d just
seen this before he’d become as recognizable as he is today. His signature
brand of humor comes through here – the kind that makes you want to laugh and
cringe at the same time.
I have mixed feelings regarding the animals in this movie. I
think this is where my main disconnect occurs.
First, I do feel I need to commend the decision regarding
the animals’ communication. I don’t know that it would have helped the film to
give the animals a ‘voice’ in the more traditional sense. The method they chose
was unique and creative.
I do feel that they dropped the ball a bit when it came to
the animal effects when directly interacting with the human cast members in
certain scenes. While the transition from live creature to prop was decently
smooth, I just expected more than an obvious stuffed animal.
Seriously. This movie was made in a post-Avatar (2009) era. While I understand
that this film quite likely didn’t have the kind of budget necessary for CGI
miracles on that level, they could have done better.
This movie would be highly entertaining for families with
young children. I doubt that I’ll be watching it again.
Rotten Tomatoes Critic Score – 8%
Rotten Tomatoes Audience Score – 31%
Netflix’s Prediction for Selina – 1.5/5
Selina’s Trust-the-Dice Score – 2/5
Netflix’s Prediction for Cat – 3/5
Cat’s Trust-the-Dice Score
– 3/5
P.S. There is an amusing music video at the end that’s
funnier than the entire film.
Movie Trailer:
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