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  • Film & TV Moderators: ghostfreak

Film: Little Fish (Australian Heroin Film)

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TheDeceased

Ex-Bluelighter
Joined
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Messages
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Movie: 'Little Fish' (Australian Heroin Film)

I cried uncrontrollably in the cinema for the first time ever while watching this wonderful film. It's extremely depressing, but I highly recommend it to anyone looking for something a bit less Hollywood or anyone directly affected by Heroin use.... or anyone at all really...

http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0382810/

It's coming out in the States on December 31st, 2005... but I'm not sure how widespread it's screenings are going to be as Australian movies don't typically do very well over there. Anyway, keep it in mind and if there happens to be a screening near you, I recommend checking it out.

Starring: Hugo Weaving, Martin Henderson, Cate Blanchett & Sam Neil
Director: Rowan Woods
Writer: Jacqueline Perske
 
Great movie. Needed more insight into the characters' past, some crappy editing, but worth it for the brilliant performances alone!
 
I must go and see this film. Luckily for me it is screening at a cinema 5 minutes walk from my place :)

I'll check it out in the near future.

CB : )
 
little fish

sounds worth it, i will keep a lookout for it when the time coes around.

poll. too.
 
IMDb doesn't have a very good plot synopsis. Is it possible for someone to give a set-up for this film without giving any of the plot away???
 
I went to an advanced screening of this with my girlfriend,

it's a pretty solid Australian movie with good actors and storyline. Play School host turned junkies mum is just funny to see!
 
I have to agree with the majority here - very solid, timeless Australian Film. There have been some pretty crappy Aussie films of late, but this has to take the cake as one of the better (if not the best) one.

Cate Blanchet is amazing - I never realised just how good an actress she was until I saw this movie! The supporting cast is amazing too, and I wouldn't be surprised if it gets nominated for some Oscars...
 
Is it possible for someone to give a set-up for this film without giving any of the plot away???

It isn't a very plot-driven film. ie. There aren't too many events of major importance. It's more about the characters.

But to give you a bit:

It's about a woman (Blanchett), who, four years after getting clean - finds herself in the midst the drug world once again as on old boyfriend unnexpectedly returns with promises of wealth and happiness.

Some movies can't be summed up into appealing little taglines and this is one of them. Reading over the paragraph above doesn't do the film justice - in fact it makes it sound somewhat obvious and predictable. This isn't the case IMO.

It's a very realistic, moving flick.

Check it out.
 
Is this film being released at most cinemas in Australia or will it be a task to find somewhere to watch it?
 
It is being shown everywhere, seen it at greater union silver screen.
 
Excellent film. I didn't realise how upset i was until walking out. I felt very VERY shook up afterwards. Amazingly down to earth and honest performances all round. My only gripe is Dustin Nguyen (21 Jump Street) seemed a little out of place. The man can act, but his accent sounded a little forced.
Hugo Weaving and Cate Blanchet were both stellar. Damn, Martin Henderson and Noni Hazelhurst were excellent as well.

Most fondly, for me, this film is the best portrayal of Sydney in film i've ever seen. Minus the H, this is the Sydney I know and grew up in. The southwest. Hell, the public swimming pool they shot in is just a suburb over and I spent countless summer days there.

And I never thought I'd see the day when a relatively high budgeted australian movie will portray accurate demographics with it's ethnicities. My high school was 75% vietnamese.
BRAVO filmmakers!
 
This is still not playing at a theater near me. But if you live in the East Village (NYC), you might be in luck. Hopefully, a major US release is coming...

Clean and Dry, for Now, in Australia's Heroin Capital

(*** REVIEW HAS SPOILERS***)



By STEPHEN HOLDEN
New York Times

To sink or to swim: that is the question. In "Little Fish," Cate Blanchett does both. The great Australian actress sinks into the role Tracy Heart, a 32-year-old recovering drug addict who manages a video store in Cabramatta, a Sydney suburb nicknamed Little Saigon for its large Vietnamese population and known as the heroin capital of Australia. As in all her screen performances, Ms. Blanchett immerses herself completely in her character, a damaged, high-strung woman determined to live the straight life while surrounded by temptation.

Recurrent scenes that push the sink-or-swim metaphor too insistently show Tracy doing laps in a pool, treading water and dunking and bobbing to the surface, anxious, watchful, impatient to get on with her life. Will she stay off drugs? To its credit, the thorny, compelling drama, directed by Rowan Woods from a screenplay by Jacquelin Perske, is more concerned with examining the conflicted, complicated relationships among its characters than with exploiting the will-she-or-won't-she aspect of Tracy's perilous situation.

If "Little Fish" is considerably more upbeat than Mr. Woods's last film, "The Boys," a harrowing study of a man's return from prison to a nightmarish family of surly deadbeats, its view of the world is still unsentimental, bordering on acrid. And the film's bleached-out color reflects its parched emotional atmosphere. The hyperrealistic screenplay sketches Tracy's family relationships in an elliptical style that pointedly omits neat explanations in underlined sentences; you have to read between the lines.

Tracy's road to self-fulfillment is paved with setbacks. Because of her record of credit-card fraud during her druggie days, her applications for a bank loan to buy and expand the video store are bluntly rejected. And although four years have passed since Tracy went clean, she is surrounded by physical and emotional wreckage from the bad old days.

Four years earlier, Tracy's brother Ray (Martin Henderson) lost part of a leg in a car crash in a vehicle driven by her ex-boyfriend Jonny Nguyen (Dustin Nguyen), a slick, seductive dealer and user who returns from a four-year exile in Vancouver claiming to have cleaned up his act and landed a job as a stockbroker for a Sydney bank. Emotional alarms go off when he drops in on Tracy, who lives with her fiercely protective single mother, Janelle (Noni Hazlehurst). But the old romantic spark between them reignites, and against her better judgment Tracy sleeps with Jonny.

Tracy also refuses to break her ties to Lionel Dawson (Hugo Weaving), a former Australian football star and family friend who introduced her to heroin and who is still using. Lionel, the gay ex-lover of the local drug kingpin, Brad Thompson (Sam Neill), supports his habit by selling sports memorabilia out of his crummy little house. But he is thrown into panic by Brad's brusque announcement of his retirement from the drug business.

If Mr. Neill's cold, efficient drug lord is diametrically opposed to the cliché movie image of a strutting, bling-flashing sadist, the character's dead-eyed indifference to anything but business is just as sinister in its understated way.

Turned away by Brad, Lionel attempts to go cold turkey but breaks down and pleads with Tracy to score some heroin. She reluctantly agrees, making the connection at the train station, where for a scary moment she considers using again.

In his portrayal of a burnt-out athlete on the skids who summons the remnants of his charm to go after what he wants, Mr. Weaving doesn't shy away from embodying a man wallowing in shame and self-degradation. Near the end, "Little Fish" becomes a melodrama involving Brad and his slippery assistant, Steven Moss (Joel Tobeck), who has stolen enough money from his boss to move with his wife into a flashy suburban house. Appended to the movie, this ugly little story culminates in a bloody midnight showdown at a speed factory. If it doesn't quite belong with the rest of the film, it helps tie up some loose plot ends. It also reinforces the movie's dry-eyed assessment of heroin and its stranglehold on people who stay in its vicinity, even after they've stopped using.

"Little Fish" is rated R (Under 17 requires accompanying parent or adult guardian). It has sexual situations, mild violence and scenes of drug taking.

Little Fish

Opens today in Manhattan.

http://movies2.nytimes.com/2006/02/24/movies/24fish.html?8dpc
 
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