Fierce Creatures review

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This freaky project, once known as Death Fish 2, is neither a sequel nor a prequel to A Fish Called Wanda but a sort of "equal". That is, the principal actors play roughly the same sorts of characters, but with different identities, and in a different setting. It sounds like a new twist on the usual sequels thing - - after all, what were the Carry On films but exactly the same idea repeated ad nauseum? - - but it isn't. As a comedy, this works on a much higher level, despite the fact that a lot of it hinges on the idea that a series of misunderstandings convince Kline and Curtis that Cleese's sexually repressed Englishman is actually a rampant, fetishistic stud.

Although Cleese is writer and producer, this is actually Kline's film. He steals it by being excellent as the richer-than-Croesus, New-Zealand-born tycoon - - hiring and firing without any thought for people, continually breaking wind at both ends - - and by being even better as his own son, a whinging, cringing oik who veers between arrogance and manic despair. Not without reason, Vince blames his father for spoiling his childhood. "How could I have done?" asks McCain Snr. "I wasn't even there."

A classy, often hilarious trans-Atlantic comedy, with spot-on performances from the principals and the supporting actors. It's as though all those problematic rewrites and reshoots never happened. If you don't laugh, you're probably a dead lemur.

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