Added to the occultic overtones are elements of scatological humor, sexual innuendo, and close to 30 instances of obscenity/profanity, making for a film that everyone will want to avoid. Yet paradoxically, the issue is left unaddressed as to why then Drop Dead Fred exhibits a violent five-year-old mentality, ripping up and decapitating dolls. Summary: A young woman finds her already unstable life rocked by the presence of a rambunctious imaginary friend from childhood. A far cry from the imaginary outings that Mary Poppins took with Jane and Michael, DROP DEAD FRED on this count not only goes over the top, but around the bend and into the ozone.Įven more disturbing is that these imaginary “friends” (more than one appear in the film), who guide us into a supposedly enlightened state, bring to mind, at least for Christians, semblances of demons. It also errs greatly by insinuating that reality can be manipulated through imagination (or that imagination can be real). All in all, the picture reads like a very blatant attack on marriage and the family. Lizzie is thus freed to get on with her life, while Drop Dead Fred goes off to “befriend” (spook is more like it) another young child. Lizzie later escapes confinement and reunites with Charles, but she still is not happy.ĭrop Dead Fred beckons Lizzie to come with him in a fanciful flight and to use her imagination to obliterate the hold that both Charles (he is still cheating on Lizzie, you see) and her selfish mother have over her (in the case of the latter, the magic words that liberate Lizzie turn out to be “I’m not afraid of you”). When the destructive incidences get out of hand, Polly takes Lizzie to a specialist who prescribes pills for her head, but these prove less than ineffective in killing off Drop Dead Fred. He wrecks her lunch dates, sinks a friend’s houseboat and tells her things like, “Never be like your mother.” However, Drop Dead Fred is more a tormentor than a helping friend and comes across as a disruptive force in Lizzie’s life. For Lizzie, this means getting back her adulterous husband Charles. The little demon-like jokester tells Lizzie he won’t leave until she’s happy again. With a penchant for smashing things, we see through flashbacks, as well as through current mishaps, that it is Lizzie who gets the blame for Drop Dead Fred’s violent antics. Visible only to Lizzie (dressed in a green coat and red shoes, he resembles Michael Keaton’s “Beetlejuice” character), Fred is evidently a real entity that leaves real evidence. Suddenly, popping in from thin air is Drop Dead Fred, Lizzie’s imaginary and obnoxious friend from childhood whom she blamed whenever anything went wrong.Īctually, Drop Dead Fred is anything but imaginary. An imaginary childhood playmate returns to a grown woman’s already disastrous life in DROP DEAD FRED, but his attempts to help her win back her womanizing husband border more on the demonic than on the innocent.Īfter losing her car, money, job, and husband all in one day, Lizzie’s mother, Polly, brings her daughter home to live with her, just as she did when Lizzie was a little girl.
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