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Little Fish

  • 2005
  • R
  • 1h 54m
IMDb RATING
6.1/10
9.5K
YOUR RATING
Cate Blanchett in Little Fish (2005)
Home Video Trailer from First Look
Play trailer2:18
1 Video
43 Photos
Drug CrimePsychological DramaCrimeDramaRomanceThriller

A woman trying to escape her past becomes embroiled in a drug deal.A woman trying to escape her past becomes embroiled in a drug deal.A woman trying to escape her past becomes embroiled in a drug deal.

  • Director
    • Rowan Woods
  • Writer
    • Jacquelin Perske
  • Stars
    • Cate Blanchett
    • Sam Neill
    • Hugo Weaving
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.1/10
    9.5K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Rowan Woods
    • Writer
      • Jacquelin Perske
    • Stars
      • Cate Blanchett
      • Sam Neill
      • Hugo Weaving
    • 71User reviews
    • 31Critic reviews
    • 77Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 12 wins & 23 nominations total

    Videos1

    Little Fish
    Trailer 2:18
    Little Fish

    Photos43

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    Top cast52

    Edit
    Cate Blanchett
    Cate Blanchett
    • Tracy
    Sam Neill
    Sam Neill
    • The Jockey
    Hugo Weaving
    Hugo Weaving
    • Lionel
    Martin Henderson
    Martin Henderson
    • Ray
    Noni Hazlehurst
    Noni Hazlehurst
    • Janelle
    Dustin Nguyen
    Dustin Nguyen
    • Jonny
    Joel Tobeck
    Joel Tobeck
    • Moss
    Lisa McCune
    Lisa McCune
    • Laura
    Susie Porter
    Susie Porter
    • Jenny
    Nina Liu
    Nina Liu
    • Mai
    Linda Cropper
    Linda Cropper
    • Denise
    Daniela Farinacci
    Daniela Farinacci
    • Donna
    Ferdinand Hoang
    Ferdinand Hoang
    • Khiem
    Anh Do
    Anh Do
    • Tran
    Jason Chong
    Jason Chong
    • Mingh
    Anthony Brandon Wong
    Anthony Brandon Wong
    • Mr. Chan
    • (as Anthony Wong)
    Bic Runga
    • Night Club Singer
    Natasha Beaumont
    Natasha Beaumont
    • Tania
    • (as Natasha E. Beaumont)
    • Director
      • Rowan Woods
    • Writer
      • Jacquelin Perske
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews71

    6.19.5K
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    Featured reviews

    9fertilecelluloid

    Emotionally graphic, pictorially intense cinema

    Director Rowan Woods and his collaborators have crafted a totally absorbing urban drama about complex homosapiens whose lives have been compromised by drugs and various addictions.

    Cate Blanchett is Tracy, the film's lynch-pin, a Western suburbs girl whose ambitions to get ahead are thwarted by financial and personal skeletons from her past.

    Scribe Jacqueline Perske manipulates a tangled web of characters ranging from Sam Neil's retiring drug baron Brad to Hugo Weaving's failed yuppie junkie Lionel. Noni Hazlehurst, in a riveting performance, plays family matriarch Janelle, a woman so crippled by regret and betrayal, she can hardly stand upright.

    The tone is a few degrees lighter than Woods' brilliant "The Boys" and the Cabramatta milieu is broader, but this is still a beautifully balanced character piece with top notch performances and a restrained third act that avoids the usual clichés.

    Supporting turns by Susie Porter (as Jenny) and Joel Tobeck (as Moss) are exceptional.

    Though some climactic clarity might have been helpful, this is, nevertheless, emotionally graphic and pictorially intense cinema.
    Camera-Obscura

    Addicton drama from Down Under

    The subject didn't sound very appealing to me but Cate Blanchett's in it and a whole cast of Aussie/NZ celebrities. Worth a peek, I thought, but sadly, it's disappointing. Cate Blanchett is Tracy, a former heroin addict trying to set up her own business and stay (emotionally) clear from a bunch of ne'er-do wells surrounding her. It's all misery in this film. For me it only works if the story is connected to a certain time and place. There's contemporary Sydney, but it merely serves as background music, it could have been anywhere anytime. It just doesn't come off as very authentic.

    Cate Blanchett, Hugo Weaving, Dustin Nguyen, Sam Neill, everyone acts their head off, but to no avail. There's little in the way of a story or direction to guide them. Blanchett is probably the most respected actress of her generation, and again she is very good. It's all her show. As a moodpiece it succeeds in a way, as drama is less rewarding. Director Rowan Woods tries hard to make this engaging but the characters, including Blanchett's, are mildly interesting at first, simply off-putting later. There's just too little to keep things afloat till the end, literally. It's all downhill and we have to slide with them.

    Camera Obscura --- 5/10
    8gradyharp

    Another Superb Film From Australia

    Writer Jacqueline Perske and Director Rowan Woods chalk up another successful Australian film in LITTLE FISH, an intense, very personal drama about how illegal drugs affect communities, families and individuals. The story begs patience from the viewer as it is gratefully one that does not spell everything out for the viewer, but instead introduces the characters slowly and with hints of backgrounds that bring them to the moments of crisis the time-frame of the film uses.

    Taking place in the Little Saigon area of Sydney, Tracy Heart (Cate Blanchett) is a recovered junkie who lives with her mother Janelle (Noni Hazlehurst) and partial amputee brother Ray (Martin Henderson), each trying to make ends meet in a life previously destroyed by drug addiction. Tracy has been clean for four years, works in a video store but has dreams of owning her own business, dreams that are thwarted by banks refusing to give her business loans solely on the basis of her previous addiction. Ray, his amputated leg the result of a car accident somehow connected with drugs, still sells heroin in 'little fish' containers, occasionally calling upon Tracy to make pickups and deliveries. The now absent stepfather Lionel (Hugo Weaving) fights his own addiction both to drugs and to his dealer Brad (Sam Neill) with whom he has been in a gay relationship since his divorce from Janelle. Tracy tries to support Lionel's attempts to kick his habit, but the attempts are failures. Everything comes to a head when 1) Tracy is desperate without her needed bank loan, 2) Tracy's Vietnamese ex-lover Jonny (Dustin Nguyen) returns from Vancouver where his family sent him to avoid the persecution of rehab in Sydney, 3) Brad retires leaving Lionel without a source of drugs or love and Lionel is replaced by a quasi-normal Steven (Joel Tobeck) who kicks the last part of the film into a spin. There are no solutions to anyone's problems: things just happen and the characters respond in the best way they can with the ominous cloud of drug addiction shading their lives and futures.

    The script is terse and smart and the direction is relentlessly realistic and well paced. Cate Blanchett gives a sterling portrayal of the very complex Tracy, and Hugo Weaving, Noni Hazelhurst, Sam Neill, Dustin Nguyen, and Martin Henderson are superb. This is a tough little film that does not fear to examine the truth about the effect of drugs on people's lives and spirits. It is a very fine film. Recommended. Grady Harp
    8nobbytatoes

    great Australian drama

    Tracy is an ex-heroin junkie how has cleaned up and wants to start a new life in her new store' but she cant finance her new endeavor. Her brother Ray is a speed dealer looking for his big deal, his friend Jonny is an ex-deal who is now a stock-broker. Lionel is looking to go straight, giving up heroin. Tracy's mother Janelle was friends with Lionel but broke off when he gave Tracy Herion. Lionel is also infatuated with Brad, his dealer.

    This is a very strong drama, and its been awhile since Australia has made a good drama. The story is a great look at family, friendship, the pain of change and rejection. Jacqueline Perske script is very deep and multi-layered. There are many sub-plots that keep you constantly thinking. Rowan Wood's direction is a step up from his last feature 'The Boys', being more experimental and more unconventional. The cinematography is wonderful, the use of many washes raise the mood and tension to higher levels, tightening the atmosphere of depression.

    This has a stellar cast; Cate Blanchett, Hugo Weaving, Noni Hazlehurst, Sam Neill, Lisa McCune, Martin Henderson and Dustin Nguyen all give strong performances, not a single flaw in the acting. Blanchett and Weaving give great career performances, Weaving is just brilliant. Hazlehurst brings a performance so shockingly different, this is not the Nomi you know from 'Play School'.

    The only thing i felt was wrong with Little Fish is its just abit to long. If it was cut down by ten minutes or so, it would have the pacing more faster and get to the point a lot quicker.

    This is a spring board of better things to come out of Australia.
    8niall-14

    Disturbingly Honest

    It's a disturbingly honest film portraying a hauntingly familiar life and how it is affected by the seamy drug/underworld of Sydney's Asian community. That's not to say that only the Asian community has drug and underworld problems, but it makes for an interesting and colourful backdrop for a complicated but compelling story. In fact, even now two hours after we left the cinema, I'm still mildly troubled by the seeming hopelessness of the confused lives portrayed. It was so real, so close to the bone. The characters could easily be you, or me. As another reviewer stated:

    "There's no light-the tunnel goes on forever." A pretty accurate assessment.

    I've heard it said that for Blanchett and Weaving their performances rank as personal bests, but I'm not all that sure I'd go that far with Weavings. He was good, very, very good as the broken-down drug-ridden ex-football star but Blanchett's performance as the reformed addict desperately trying to get her life together, to set up her own business and actually resurrect something from the pathetic life she has, was absolutely amazing. Her character is both complex and simplistic all at once. You can detest and love her, feel sympathy and disdain and find by movie's end you're aware that she could so easily be you.

    Included in the cast as perennials the likes of Noni Hazlehurst, Lisa McCune and Sam Neill all played sound parts but not a patch on the leads. The balance of the cast are movie journeymen/women who have many and varied backgrounds. None were overly outstanding, although I found the character of Jonny, Blanchett's former boyfriend played by Dustin Nguyen to be quite well done. He disgusted me for what he was and what he wanted to be and that's the actors art.

    Go and see this flick. It's an outstanding example of the Australian film industry's capabilities. I rate it 8 out of 10.

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    Related interests

    Wendell Pierce and Dominic West in The Wire (2002)
    Drug Crime
    Jim Carrey and Kate Winslet in Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind (2004)
    Psychological Drama
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    Crime
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    Thriller

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      A rare glimpse of Hugo Weaving driving a car; even if it is just backing it out of a driveway. He has never owned a driver's license because of his epilepsy. You can see it was him because of his reflection in the side mirror.
    • Goofs
      When they arrive at the school reunion in the beginning there is a photo wall. "In Memorium" (spelled incorrectly like that) is on a sign above the photos. Below the photos is another sign that reads "Remember the good old days" but when they do a close-up of the lower sign it reads "In Memorium Class of '89". Then they do another wide shot and the original sign is back again.
    • Quotes

      Tracy Heart: The past is right here. It's right here.

    • Connections
      Featured in At the Movies: Episode #2.31 (2005)
    • Soundtracks
      Flame Trees
      (Vocalise Version)

      Written by Don Walker & Steve Prestwich

      Arranged & Performed by Nathan Larson & Nina Persson

      Published by Palomarr Pty Ltd / Sony / ATV Music Publishing Australia & BigBang Publishing Pty Ltd

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    FAQ19

    • How long is Little Fish?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • September 8, 2005 (Australia)
    • Country of origin
      • Australia
    • Languages
      • English
      • Vietnamese
    • Also known as
      • Маленька рибка
    • Filming locations
      • Bankstown, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
    • Production companies
      • Porchlight Films
      • Australian Film Finance Corporation (AFFC)
      • Mullis Capital Independent
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $8,148
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $6,127
      • Feb 26, 2006
    • Gross worldwide
      • $3,248,506
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 54m(114 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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