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Fish Tank - Movie Review

London : United Kingdom | 2 months ago  
Views: 106

When I was doing my A’level Communication Studies, we did a module on Ken Loach and one of the films we watched was Family Life starring Sandy Ratcliff (who went on to play Sue in Eastenders – she must be a glutton for punishment) about a young woman who is forced into an abortion by her parents and then descends into mental breakdown. It was at the time labelled as the most depressing film ever made. I’m not sure if it is still considered that, but I have to say Andrea Arnold’s Fish Tank comes a close second if it is. My recollections of Andrea Arnold is of the bubbly haired children’s TV presenter on No.73 so it comes as a bit of shock to find her behind the lens of this misery-fest.

Fish Tank tells the story of fifteen year old Mia (Katie Jarvis), who has been kicked out of school and is living in a skanky council flat with an equally skanky mother and a little sister with a mouth so foul, she could give Bobb’e J Thompson in Role Models a run for his money. Mia is a loner whose only outlet in life is to do hip hop dancing in an abandoned flat on her estate. Into her life comes Connor (Michael Fassbender), her mother’s latest squeeze. A sexy, charming Irishman who is seducer, father figure and predatory ephebophiliac rolled into one. The sexual chemistry between him and Mia crackles along and you can never quite tell if he’s grooming her or it’s a genuine attraction he can’t fight. At the same time Mia becomes friends with Kyle (Harry Treadaway) a young Gypsy boy who saves her from being raped.

With these men in her life, Mia slowly transforms from sulky adolescent to a young girl having to deal with the pressures and heartaches that adult life brings and all without the support of a mother or friends. Katie Jarvis (an unknown plucked off the streets by Arnold) is a revelation, acting the socks off actresses twice her age with a lifetime of experience and a degree in dramatic arts. I predict great things for her.

The downside is that you get the feeling Arnold is just trying too hard. There are several shots of landscapes that last for what feels like thirty seconds, with nothing at all happening. There is very little humour in this film, in comparison to say Shane Meadows’ This is England, that while dealing with a depressing subject matter, still contains moments of hilarity, mainly coming from Thomas Turgoose playing the little big man. I get the feeling Arnold is trying to be taken seriously and so has gone over the top in piling on the misery. The film contains everything; underage sex, profanity, ten year olds smoking, underage drinking. Name a shock factor and Fish Tank has it in abundance.

The upside is that it is realistic; low budget but doesn’t show it; the improvised dialogue lends an air of authenticity and I would put money on the supporting artists being local, Barking residents which makes it seem real. Added to this, the use of Bobby Womack in the soundtrack has made me revisit his back catalogue – and you know what. It’s really good!

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  • News Source: Androscoggin News | 2 months ago
    06pm Thursday 17th September 2009 Stars: Katie Jarvis, Kierston Wareing, Michael Fassbender, Rebecca Griffiths, Harry Treadaway Running time: 122 mins Rating: ★★★★ THE Jury Prize Winner at this year’s Cannes Film Festival looks on the...
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  • Blog Source: woolflapin.com
    This is Andrea Arnold (middle) during Q&A at the Toronto International Film Festival where she is presenting Fish Tank. A coming-of-age tale about a 15-year-old girl living in the slums of Essex, England. ... The film opens with Mia headbutting the
  • Blog Source: inleaguewithpaton.blogspot.com
    'Fish Tank' is perhaps less original but a good deal more assured. It takes Arnold's natural feel for location and mood and applies them to something which could be described as a social realist genre piece. Arnold not only brilliantly establishes
  • Blog Source: www.mcnblogs.com
    (Interestingly, Samantha Morton’s first feature, The Unloved, here at the fest, walks down a similar road.) Here it is the story of Mia, a 15-year-old with a lot of anger, but some earnest dreams and a will of iron. ...
  • Blog Source: www.hammertonail.com
    Like Red Road, Fish Tank is a naturalistic drama that feels like a thriller. I sat down with Arnold at the 2009 Toronto International Film Festival, where she discussed her aversion to blocking scenes, what led her to make Mia a hip-hop .... AA:
  • Blog Source: www.tonywatkins.co.uk
    Having now watched Fish Tank a second time, I am more exhilarated than ever by Arnold's idealism, and in a movie marketplace where so much is vapidly cynical, this is a mistral of fresh air. ... If Ken Loach were ever somehow called on
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