In the world of Fantastic Mr. Fox, the animals use “cuss” in place of actual cuss words. This substitute was a great way for Wes Anderson to include his signature foul-mouthed dialogue in a family-friendly animated movie. During a heated argument with Badger, Mr. Fox says, “Are you cussing with me?
After he goes back to stealing, antagonizes the local farmers, and jeopardizes the family home, Mrs. Fox is understandably furious with her husband, who promised her he’d give up crime. When Mr. Fox explains why he returned to a life of crime, he also explains the title. He needs people to think of him as “the quote-unquote ‘Fantastic Mr. Fox.’”
Mrs. Fox, who was weaker than ever now from lack of food, opened one eye and looked at the hens. “I’m dreaming,” she murmured and closed the eye again.”
Soon they were crouching underneath yet another wooden floor. Mr. Fox grinned slyly, showing sharp white teeth. “If I am not mistaken, my dear Badger,” he said, “we are now underneath the farm which belongs to that nasty little pot-bellied dwarf, Bunce.
Well, you can't really put the F word in a kids movie. That's why they just used cuss. By using "Cuss", they did a nice job of turning the phrase, thus allowing both adults and children to watch the movie and extrapolate their own meaning of this word. Or more, getting amused by following conversation.
FANTASTIC MR. FOX was released in November 2009, making a worldwide total of $46 million from a $40 million budget. By animation standards this is a big flop, even with a modest budget in comparison to the larger scale animated pics.
0:292:33Fantastic Mr. Fox (1/5) Movie CLIP - Boggis, Bunce and Bean (2009) HDYouTubeStart of suggested clipEnd of suggested clipHis own species of each. He lives on a liquid diet of strong alcoholic cider which he makes from hisMoreHis own species of each. He lives on a liquid diet of strong alcoholic cider which he makes from his Allen.
The film delves into what it means to be a father and husband, and the relationships of this family. Foxy breaks the promise he made to his wife, and in doing so turns everyone's lives upside down, but it also forces him to look at himself, to acknowledge who he is.
The plot follows the titular character Mr. Fox (Clooney), as his spree of thefts results in his family, and later his community, being hunted down by three farmers known as Boggis (Robin Hurlstone), Bunce (Hugo Guinness), and Bean (Michael Gambon)....Fantastic Mr. FoxBox office$46.5 million16 more rows
Kristofferson Silverfox is a secondary character in the film Fantastic Mr. Fox. He is Mr. Fox's nephew (from his wife's side) and slightly younger cousin to their son Ash....Obi-Wan Takes the High Ground! - The Loop.Kristofferson'Vital statisticsTitleGenderMale6 more rows
Boggis gives off a filthy stink of rotten chicken-skins. Bunce reeks of goose-livers, and Bean sells like poisonous cider.
Boggis, Bunce and Bean. One fat, one short, one lean. These horrible crooks, so different in looks, were nonetheless equally mean. A popular children's song that reflects their nature.
Phonetic spelling of Niru. n-ee-r-uu. niru.Meanings for Niru. It is a masculine name of Persian origin meaning "having great strength and power. "Translations of Niru. Russian : Нирм
“I have a phobia of wolves,” is how Mr Fox pretentiously puts it; he says it often. What he means is, as a civilised canine, he is afraid of the primal animal that lurks beneath his gorgeous corduroy suit: his ravenous appetites, his selfishness, the danger he poses to his loved ones.
The story was engaging, the characters felt real, and the visuals were everything. The only thing I felt iffy about how much of a narcissist Mr. Fox was, and how that narcissism kind of ends up paying off at the end? But it didn't distract from how much I enjoyed the movie, so whatever!
Fox meets the wolf, the whole scene is him realizing that he is not that wild after all. He almost gets his eyes teary due to this realization, he is not a pure animal after all.