A 2007 zombie comedy with a 71% Rotten Tomatoes score serves as a perfect follow-up to the themes explored inGeorge A. Romero’sNight of the Living Deadfranchise.While plenty of people point toShaun of the Deadas a perfect zombie comedyin the form of Romero movies, the 2007 Canadian zombie comedyFidodeserves a lot more credit.

Directed by Andrew Currie,the underratedFidotakes place in a worldafterhumans have already won the zombie apocalypse (known as the Zombie Wars). A company called ZomCom invented collars that control the zombie’s hunger for flesh, and they sell them to use on surviving zombies to serve as servants for humanity.

The family standing with Fido

Scottish comedian Billy Connolly plays a zombie that one family purchases, and their son Timmy names him Fido. However, when Fido’s collar malfunctions, and he kills a local woman, panic spreads throughthe idealisticPleasantville-esquetown, and ZomCom is there to both profit from and capitalize on the situation. It is a perfect morality tale from Romero’s playbook.

Fido Perfectly Plays Into The Anti-Consumerism Themes From Romero’s Zombie Movies

Romero’s Movies Rallied Against Consumerism & Capitalistic Control Of Lives

Fidois about a young boy named Timmy and his pet zombie Fido, with the references toLassie Come Homeobvious throughout the movie. However, there is an underlying plot that involves the company ZomCom, and its control of the world as they hold theone thing that keeps the zombies at bay.They also believe money sells safety, and without money, they don’t care.

Having this as a comedy doesn’t change anything. Romero lovedShaun of the Deadand felt it treated zombies respectfully. This is why Romero invitedSimon Pegg and Edgar Wright to play zombiesinLand of the Dead. Fido might not get mentioned in the discussions of the best zombie comedies, but it plays well alongside Romero’s movies.

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Romero depicted how governments and corporations exert control over the world.

Dawn of the Deadtakes place in a shopping mall, allowing Romero to deliver a direct attack against consumerism and capitalism, highlighting how neither of these things matters during a zombie apocalypse. InDay of the DeadandLand of the Dead,Romero depicted how governments and corporations exert control over the world during the zombie apocalypse.

This is also what happens inFido,where ZomCom decides who lives and dies, and it is all about the interests of the stockholders. This is a real-world situation, wherepeople live and die based on what their governments decide alongside the billionaires.Romero hated this and rallied against it in his movies, andFidofollows suit.

Fido Remains One Of The 2000s' Most Overlooked Zombie Movies

Fido Stands Up Well WithShaun Of The Dead

There is no argument thatShaun of the Deadmight be the funniest zombie comedyever made. However, it is unfair to overlook the film that came out two years later.Fido was smart in that it never tried to replicate what madeShaun of the Deadgreat.Instead, it focused on doing something completely different by focusing on the world after the zombie apocalypse.

Placing it in an idyllic world similar toPleasantvilleand then hiring a fantastic cast that included names like Carrie-Anne Moss, Tim Blake Nelson, and Dylan Baker also helped. The comedy was not as slapstick as some ofShaun of the Dead,but it had a smart message about society and howhumans will never allow even zombies to ruin their chance to make money.

For anyone looking for something different in a zombie comedy, and who loves the messages that George A. Romero focused on in hisLiving Deadmovies,Fidooffers that in surplus. It doesn’t get the same attention as other zombie comedies, but it deserves any accolades it can get.