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In adapting Roald Dahl's "Fantastic Mr. Fox," Anderson (who co-wrote the script with Noah Baumbach), added bookends to Dahl's story. The plot essentially remains the same: The daring Mr. Fox (George Clooney) leads his family and friends into trouble when he picks a fight with neighboring farmers. After a long battle both with the farmers and within his fractured, idiosyncratic family, Mr. Fox
-- though scarred -- triumphs. His family is still stuck underground, but Mr. Fox discovers how they'll survive. The film ends with the group dancing in the aisles of a grocery store, owned by the same farmers bent on the animals' destruction. The ending came from Dahl's original manuscripts, not the published version.
"It was only when we had the song did I get, `Here's what the mood is, here's what we're going to walk out of the theater with,'" says the 40-year-old director. "The scene exists because of the song." The tune, "Let Her Dance," is a forgotten classic by Fuller, and Anderson says the song had been "on our list" since his frequent music supervisor, Randall Poster, played it for him about 10 years ago. The song's sock-hop exuberance
-- tinged with sacrifice -- matches the Fox family's celebration perfectly. "For me, that's the whole reason for getting into it in the first place," says Anderson. "The feeling when you're walking out of the theater and the whole thing has hit you
-- and usually there is something musical happening at that moment -- and you're taking it all in." Anderson's endings are almost like distillations of his entire work. Again and again, he meticulously creates characters of wit, audacity and melancholy. They teeter on the edge of keeping it together, but in the end they always do: They preserve the family, they get back on the train. The consistency isn't intentional, Anderson says. Rather, the hundreds of decisions involved in making a movie "has a tendency of digging into your unconscious in ways that you're not entirely in charge of." "At the end of it, you step back and you feel like, `Well, I've shown my hand again,'" says Anderson, smiling. "At that point, I'm sort of standing with the characters, looking out at the camera a bit
-- seeing it from that point of view."
[Associated
Press;
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