Fish Tank (15)

Film

Drama

Time Out rating:

<strong>Rating: </strong>5/5

User ratings:

<strong>Rating: </strong>4/5
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Time Out says

Tue Mar 23 2010

I can understand why some people might recoil at the thought of another British film set on a council estate. Is it worthy? Condescending? Grim? Is it more evidence of a young filmmaker awkwardly exercising their Mike Leigh/Ken Loach fetishes? Well, banish your fears: Andrea Arnold’s follow-up to ‘Red Road’ is a film that brilliantly and sensitively buzzes with life and offers its very own take on our world and our city. It delivers in spades attitude, humour, sadness, love, anger and hope – all wrapped up in a way of telling stories that is very much the director’s own. It’s realism, but it has an intimacy, an immediacy and a dash of poetry that offers a new spin on familiar territory.
Arnold has a keen eye for the border between danger and fulfilment when it comes to sexual feelings, and here she trains that eye on one vulnerable but strong adolescent teenage girl, Mia (Katie Jarvis), who you can’t help but feel for and understand – even after we watch her call a friend’s dad a ‘cunt’ and headbutt another girl so that the blood pours down her face. And that’s just the first five minutes.

Mia lives in a flat in Essex, near the Thames estuary, with her mum Joanne (Kierston Wareing) and her little sister Tyler (Rebecca Griffith). Mia calls her little sis ‘fuck face’ and little sis calls her ‘cunt face’ back. The TV blares out reality shows and makeover programmes. Outside, Arnold’s camera sucks up the territory on which she films; flats, busy roads, flyovers, scraps of land and suburban shop parades all lend a strong sense of place without any sense of gawking or romanticising. This is Mia’s world and there it is: it can sometimes look ugly, sometimes look beautiful. Arnold and DoP Robbie Ryan shoot in the unusual 1.33:1 aspect ratio, so the screen is almost square, but ‘Fish Tank’ feels more like a series of personal Polaroids than TV, the glare of the sun often dancing across the lens in the manner of home snapshots.

Nothing about all this feels miserable. It helps that Arnold tells her tale at the height of summer so that the sun is always shining. It also helps that Arnold’s way of presenting Mia to us is to stay close to her at all times, to show us her world from her point of view. Crucially, we’re there, alone with Mia, when she regularly decamps to an empty flat and practices her hip hop dance moves. We know there’s more to Mia than antagonism and kneejerk violence and we’re curious about what’s going on in this girl’s head.

We’re there, too, when her mum brings home a man, Connor (Michael Fassbender), who is soon living with them, doing the washing-up with his top off and taking them for a drive. Mia’s smiles show that she likes him, while he pays her more attention than anyone else in her life, praising her dance moves, giving her a piggyback, even tucking her up in bed when she pretends to be asleep. Their relationship takes unusual, even alarming turns, but always Arnold avoids obvious judgements, obvious explanations. Hers is an intimate drama of grey areas and all the better and more thoughtful – and thought-provoking – for it.
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Release details

Rated:

15

UK release:

Fri Sep 11 2009

Duration:

124 mins

Cast and crew

Cast:

Michael Fassbender, Thomas Ian Griffith, Graham Jarvis

Cinematography:

Robbie Ryan

Director:

Andrea Arnold

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Comments & ratings

Rated as: 4/5 (21 ratings)
  • SUP MUSHHH. THIS IS SEEEEK BLED.. WHEN SHE HEADBUTS HER MUSH. FUCKING REYT HIT

    SEBASTION Thu Dec 13 2012
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  • This film totally blew me away with it's outstanding performances from the two leads. Newcomer Katie Jarvis in particular stole the show with Fassbender burning up the screen. Give me a film that's slow, sure, subtle and poetic over that tanked up turbo charged American twank that Hollywood insists on churning out, ANYDAY!!

    dalton ewan Thu Dec 13 2012
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  • Posted on Jan 12 2012 22:48 This film totally blew me away with it's outstanding performances from the two leads. Newcomer Katie Jarvis in particular stole the show with Fassbender burning up the screen. Give me a film that's slow, sure, subtle and poetic over that tanked up turbo charged American twank that Hollywood insists on churning out, ANYDAY!!

    Matty Kell Thu Dec 13 2012
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  • This film totally blew me away with it's outstanding performances from the two leads. Newcomer Katie Jarvis in particular stole the show with Fassbender burning up the screen. Give me a film that's slow, sure, subtle and poetic over that tanked up turbo charged American twank that Hollywood insists on churning out, ANYDAY!!

    Theresa Thu Jan 12 2012
    Rated as: 5/5
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  • The film is about a child being raped. I (obviously) found it troubling. I'm mystified by most of the other comments..

    hamish Tue Oct 18 2011
    Rated as: 3/5
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  • Fantastic, definately one to watch. Was a bit dissapointed of the end though, would like to see a sequel.

    Jodie of Perth, Australia Mon Oct 10 2011
    Rated as: 5/5
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  • so true and painful (I live a couple of miles from the mardyke estate) that I had to watch it in a few sittings - where the 2 sisters at the end hug each other and say they hate each other (while meaning they love each other) made me cry - still crying as I type this - what a film!

    Nige Thu Sep 15 2011
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  • Just watched this as it is up on bbc iplayer at the moment. I thought it was amazing but also very depressing. Katie Jarvis is perfect in this film. I didnt grow up on a council estate so I have no idea wether it is a good portrayal or not? however it felt very real and and is definitely worth a try. Similar in some ways to this is england.

    laura Wed Aug 17 2011
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  • This is one of the best British films I have ever seen. You have to like gritty realism, and good acting, and this won't be everyone's cup of tea; giving it less than 4 stars is just idiocy. But I felt that this really captured the brutalities and disappointments of everyday council flat life in the UK better than anything else, and added humour, tragedy, and complex characters. Great film and highly recommended.

    William Mon Aug 15 2011
    Rated as: 5/5
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  • Reading some reviews of this film anger me. To call this film "pointless" and to compare it to such cheesy and fake movies like "Kidulthood" really, really irks me. I understand this film is not for everyone, but to say its "pointless", it makes me question if you've even seen the film. It's slow moving, quiet, understated, rough around the edges, but those are qualities I love in films and it tugged at my heartstrings tremendously and had a dark, gritty message about adolescence that is rarely shown in such an accurate way. The film's locale is important, yet just a backdrop for the main character to play off of and really adds to the overall mood and theme of the entire movie. Katie Jarvis's performance is absolutely haunting, sensitive, angry, and moving, and to discredit her because she's come from a similar background isn't fair, the way she balances the outer, angry shell of Mia and shows the soft, sensitive underlying is simply beautiful. Andrea Arnold is an absolutely amazing director and takes us through this story sometimes subtly, and sometimes harshly, but it all feels natural, and everything comes together seamlessly. The attention to details really set this apart from other films in this subgenre and all I know is I will remember "Fish Tank" for a very, very long time.

    Sebastian Wed Mar 23 2011
    Rated as: 5/5
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