Furry Vengeance

2010 "He came. He saw. They conquered."
3.9| 1h32m| PG| en
Details

When real estate developer Dan Sanders finalizes plans to level a swath of pristine Oregon forest to make way for a soulless housing subdivision, a band of woodland creatures rises up to throw a monkey wrench into the greedy scheme. Just how much mischief from the furry critters can the businessman take before he calls it quits?

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Reviews

Clevercell Very disappointing...
Protraph Lack of good storyline.
Macerat It's Difficult NOT To Enjoy This Movie
Btexxamar I like Black Panther, but I didn't like this movie.
Dominic LeRose Cheap family humor with animals, Brendan Fraser, not even triple digits in length and randomness, what more could go wrong? "Furry Vengeance" is an irritating, obnoxious, forced, and terrible film. This may even be the single worst movie ever made so far. Brendan Fraser gives a horrible performance as Dan Sanders, a real estate developer who faces animal protesters to avoid loosing their homes. The critters do ridiculous tricks on him before Dan realizes what he is doing is bad. Of course their are villains! The funny Asian guy Ken Jeong and "The Office"'s Angela Kinsey try to keep building. They aren't gunny here either. The entire film is predicable and unfunny mayhem that may make a couple of kids laugh and thank their parents for letting them see, but if you have a mind pat adolescents that is developing and not dead, you will hate this film to the point you start burning the disc. Everything is annoying, frustrating, and god awful. Notice how many sentences with lists of how awful this furry mess I have written. Go sky-diving without a parachute or swim in a pool of blood with great white sharks before seeing this film. Or try to build real estate on some hardcore animals land.
Nick Picture Doctor Doolittle 2 with Eddie Murphy. Now picture the movie without any funny animal dialogue. Now replace all the funny human characters with painfully boring characters. Now amp up the hackneyed, overused plot to be even more cliché. Now walk out of the theater angry and demanding your money back. You've just seen Furry Vengeance. I thought the Egyptian plagues ended with the death of the first born son, so what it the explanation for this garbage? For those of you who think I'm being cruel, let me recap the plot. Some guy wants to tear down a forest, and the animals play pranks on him. That's it. Nothing else. For over an hour. Ugh. Well, as with all things, there is a bright side. Brendan Fraser CAN'T star in a worse film. Once you've hit rock bottom, (and I'm pretty sure this hits the bedrock), there's no place to go but up. The worst is over. At least, until someone tries to make a sequel.. duh duh duuuunnnnn!
Jackson Booth-Millard I heard about this film at the time it was released in cinemas and on DVD, I knew it was filled with animals and I knew the leading actor, and I could tell it was going to be terrible and rated so by critics, from director Roger Kumble (Cruel Intentions, The Sweetest Thing, Just Friends). Basically in the wilderness of Oregon, real estate land developer Dan Sanders (Brendan Fraser) from Chicago has been given the task by his boss Neal Lyman (Ken Jeong), following Riggs (The Hangover's Rob Riggle) quitting, to oversee a project that will turn the forest into a residential development. Dan's son Tyler (Matt Prokop) objects to this job he has, and his wife Tammy (Brooke Shields) is also unhappy and misses life in Chicago, the animals of Rocky Springs meanwhile, led by the raccoon, are making plans to stop their forest from being destroyed by turning the tables on the human they see as the devil. Dan soon finds himself threatened by interruptions in his progress and humiliation from the woodland animals, they cause all sorts of chaotic mayhem for him in his professional and personal life, and no-one will believe his explanations that the animals are doing it. Following many embarrassing and painful incidents initiated by the creatures he finally gets the forest ranger to capture all of them, and he is able to continue business, but he realises there is no truth in the "eco-friendly" plot to cut down all the trees and build houses and a shopping mall. The raccoon and all the others animals, including the brown bear, various birds and the skunk, get together and destroy the festivities of the fair going on, guests and entertainers run away in panic, and the deal by Lyman is broken. In the end Dan realises the error of his ways, and three months later the animals and their families return to Rocky Springs forest, which becomes a nature reserve, and Dan becomes the park ranger who will fine anyone who tries to violate the area or creatures. Also starring Angela Kinsey as Felder, Skyler Samuels as Amber, Toby Huss as Wilson, Samantha Bee as Principal Baker, Ricky Garcia as Frank, Wallace Shawn as Dr. Christian Burr, Jim Norton as Hank and Patrice O'Neal as Gus. Fraser is annoying being made to look stupid, the casting of Shields and Jeong is a bit pointless, it seems just an excuse to see cute animals being wily and sabotaging things, and the special effects to create the slapstick situations and cartoon like moments is a bit wasted, children may find this film funny, but everyone will find this a terrible numbskull comedy. Adequate!
aesgaard41 I like Brendan Fraser. I really do. I think he does best when he's doing comedies like "Bedazzled" or family fare like "Journey To The Center Of The Earth." "Furry Vengeance" is good comedy to spread its "Get Green" message, and it does it while being funny. Fraser plays a contractor living in the housing development he is building near the woods of a forest preserve, and the animals have learned his bosses want to devastate the forest for housing tracts. He mugs, grimaces and reacts to the wild antics going on as he surrenders his body to more slapstick again and again. One of the odd things about this movie is that the animals, ranging from a raccoon, some skunks, beavers and a bear among others, act and think like humans; just how and why is never resolved. The bulk of the movie is the amount of abuse and harassment Fraser gets from these furry woodland creatures and his resulting psychosis when he realizes the animals seem to have a conspiracy against him, but by then, they've infested his house and violated his car. Brooke Shields plays his wife oblivious to the action, and his son and girl friend are additional witnesses to his spiraling descent into hysteria. It's a really funny movie once you learn to ignore the ridiculous leaps in logic and science, but you really start to cheer the animals on as they fight together in wild and creative scenarios to defend their homes. There's a message in the movie that isn't forced; it's much more simple than coerced, and the closing montage of movie parodies is a lot of fun to watch as well.