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Fish Tank

August 4th 2010 22:05
Fish Tank
Fish Tank 2009

Fish Tank begins with a familiar template, reminiscent of Loach and Leigh, but it doesn’t mean we’ve seen it all before and shouldn’t delve into it. Mia lives with her single working class mum and younger sister in a large decaying council estate maze in Essex. The landscape mostly, though not entirely, is distinguished by blank horizons and vestiges of vanished industries. Words are shrieked as they are felt without pauses for niceness. It is a world where people live too close to each other yet their lives are isolated and only linked by their mutual contempt and abrasion.

Mia is an aggressive, street-tough kid shaped by her with a tortured home life and tough surroundings. Her non-involved alcoholic mother only acknowledges her daughter by pushing her around and screaming epithets at her. Mia has a similar reciprocal relationship with her younger, almost-equally mouthy sister who matches Mia’s exclamations, calling her, ‘c**t face’ when Mia calls her, ‘fuck face’.

Mia’s physical and emotional self-defence exudes in most of her actions. In Mia’s first onscreen five minutes, she we see her call a friend’s dad a ‘c**t’ and head butt another girl. Constantly bored and contemptuous of her surroundings, Mia never ventures far from home until she spies a flyer saying, ‘Female Dancer Wanted’. This gives her the impetus to focus on something she feels really matters, hip-hop dancing. Lying down her CD player and speakers in an empty flat above her own, she practises her dance movements in preparation for her audition. She dances without joy, with a strong hardness with her hood over her head in the darkness. Throughout the film, dance is used as integral way for Mai to communicate and escape into. Indeed, it is an essential, delicately beautiful part of the almost soundless resolution between disaffected Mia and her mother.

Fish Tank - Katie Jarvis
Fish Tank - Katie Jarvis


Used to her mother’s contempt and lack of concern about her and her life, Mia is defensively surprised when her mother’s new boyfriend, Connor seems to notice and actually care about her. Connor is funny, sexy, confident and calm where everyone else appears clenched with hardened resentment. Mia’s quiet smiles show that she likes him, while he pays her more attention than anyone else in her life, praising her dancing, giving her a piggyback, even tucking her up in bed when she pretends to be asleep. Initially, Connor’s intentions are not clearly defined, he seems genuinely nice, especially supporting Mia’s ambitions to be a dancer yet his actions become concerning. Their relationship takes an unexpected and disquieting turn, but as always, director Arnold avoids any overt judgments or explanations. The tangled and increasingly complex relationship that develops between Mia and Connor is both disturbing and devastating, with a certain amount of empathy allowed for both characters.

Fish Tank - Michael Fassbender
Fish Tank - Michael Fassbender


This is Andrea Arnold’s second feature film that has again earned her the Jury Prize at the Cannes Film festival in 2009. Her debut film, ‘Red Road’ from 2006 also gained the same title. After 'Fish Tank' won the British Independent Film Award for Best Director of a British Independent Film, her work has since been likened to established names such as Michael Haneke and Lars von Trier.

It could be ascertained that the title is a metaphor for the way Mia feels helplessly confined in an environment where she just goes around and around with no chance of escape. While it sounds like this is a dismal tale, the blazing English sun adds some lightness interlinked with some humour. As with other films in the social realism vein, Fish Tank doesn’t conclude with a neat, mushy decision. All ends aren’t tightly tied up and the characters don’t morph into someone completely different. It deftly shows highlights how unexpectedly vulnerable the seemingly bolshy and aggressive teenagers who live in these housing estates can be.


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Comments
13 Comments. [ Add A Comment ]

Comment by Anonymous

August 4th 2010 23:10
great review

Comment by Tracy

August 4th 2010 23:28
Thanks very much, Anon. Nice to see you.

Comment by Bryn

August 5th 2010 01:23
You're funny Tracy ... putting asterisks for cunt, but not for fuck ... I've always thought the use of asterisks only brings more attention to the word, giving it more "power" ... It's obviously still considered a more offensive expletive, but I wouldn't have expected you to be so pedantic ...

I love Michael Fassbender, just saw him in Centurion, and of course loved him in Inglourious Basterds.

Comment by Tracy

August 5th 2010 03:29
He he, Bryn. I think you're more pedantic for noticing!! You know what, it never occured to me to do it for 'fuck' and I really almost didn't use the astericks at all but I thought Orble or google might censor me....but of course, my logic doen't make any sense. On a subconscious level, I think it says that I am OK with 'fuck' (in some contexts) and not so much with the other (see, I can't even say it now that I'm thinking about it).

I haven't seen Fassbender in anything else yet but I intend on doing because I thought he was captivating. And sexy....

Comment by Bryn

August 5th 2010 03:34
I was being pedantic cos it stuck out (using them on one word and not the other) ... True, Google are conservative f**kwits. They've already "censored" me but removing advertising cos I breached content policy (violent imagery), I mean puh-lease, I write a horror movie site! But enough of that!
Yes Fassbender is definitely sexy. He's got that lovely well-spoken English thespian voice (which reminds me of Paul McGann the I from Withnail and I)

Comment by Tracy

August 5th 2010 05:12
True, I should be more consistent with my expletive rules, tutty tut.

Yes, I know about Google's censorship on your site, seems really extreme to me.

Yes, Fassbender is quite like McGann, I know what you mean. I'm going to make plans for my next Fessbender viewing to be soon...

Comment by Bryn

August 5th 2010 05:47
Drool on, drool on

Comment by Tracy

August 5th 2010 05:53
Mmm, I think I will!

Comment by AmyHuang

August 9th 2010 00:07
I am guessing it's on DVD?
Might put that on my to watch list.

Comment by Tracy

August 9th 2010 00:34
Hi Amy

Yes, it's on DVD now.

Thanks for popping in,

Tracy

Comment by Michaelie

September 8th 2010 10:46
Great review Trace!

Am also drooling over Fassbender. Will resist making crude innuendo out of his last name.

He is going to be in the new adaptation of Jane Eyre I hear! Yow - Mr Rochester...

Comment by Tracy

September 30th 2010 03:20
Thanks, Mich. How are you?

Ah yes, he is worthy of some drool. Feel free to create any innuendo you can out of his name. And he would be quite perfect as Mr Rochester.

Hope all is well with you!!

Comment by Michaelie

November 2nd 2010 05:48
Can appreciate this more now - just saw this film today. I think it ended really well, as you state in your last paragraph, not everything is tied up, but neither is everything left hanging completely.

I think sometimes with these films, the need to draw away from happy ever afters or very defined conclusions means they end too sharply so that the momentum of the film just stops. With Fish Tank I think it left the audience pondering the characters' futures, without feeling like anything had been snatched away.

Anyway, I really liked it!

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