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IMDbPro

Fish Tank

  • 2009
  • B-15
  • 2h 3min
CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
7.3/10
67 k
TU CALIFICACIÓN
POPULARIDAD
1,939
1,141
Katie Jarvis in Fish Tank (2009)
Everything changes for 15yr old Mia when her mum brings home a new boyfriend.
Reproducir trailer2:04
9 videos
94 fotos
DramaDrama AdolescenteLa mayoría de edad

Todo cambia para Mia, de 15 años, cuando su madre trae a casa un nuevo novio.Todo cambia para Mia, de 15 años, cuando su madre trae a casa un nuevo novio.Todo cambia para Mia, de 15 años, cuando su madre trae a casa un nuevo novio.

  • Dirección
    • Andrea Arnold
  • Guionista
    • Andrea Arnold
  • Elenco
    • Katie Jarvis
    • Michael Fassbender
    • Kierston Wareing
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
  • CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
    7.3/10
    67 k
    TU CALIFICACIÓN
    POPULARIDAD
    1,939
    1,141
    • Dirección
      • Andrea Arnold
    • Guionista
      • Andrea Arnold
    • Elenco
      • Katie Jarvis
      • Michael Fassbender
      • Kierston Wareing
    • 154Opiniones de los usuarios
    • 185Opiniones de los críticos
    • 81Metascore
  • Ver la información de producción en IMDbPro
    • Ganó 1 premio BAFTA
      • 21 premios ganados y 30 nominaciones en total

    Videos9

    Fish Tank
    Trailer 2:04
    Fish Tank
    Fish Tank
    Trailer 1:57
    Fish Tank
    Fish Tank
    Trailer 1:57
    Fish Tank
    Fish Tank
    Clip 1:19
    Fish Tank
    Fish Tank
    Clip 2:24
    Fish Tank
    Fish Tank
    Clip 1:14
    Fish Tank
    Fish Tank
    Clip 0:54
    Fish Tank

    Fotos93

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    Elenco principal45

    Editar
    Katie Jarvis
    Katie Jarvis
    • Mia
    Michael Fassbender
    Michael Fassbender
    • Connor
    Kierston Wareing
    Kierston Wareing
    • Joanne
    Rebecca Griffiths
    • Tyler
    Carrie-Ann Savill
    • Tyler's Friend
    Toyin Ogidi
    • Tyler's Friend
    Grant Wild
    • Keeley's Dad
    Sarah Bayes
    • Keeley
    Charlotte Collins
    • Tall Dancing Girl
    Kirsty Smith
    • Dancing Girl
    Chelsea Chase
    • Dancing Girl
    Brooke Hobby
    • Dancing Girl
    Harry Treadaway
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    • Billy
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    • Tennents the Dog
    Alan Francis
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    Ben Francis
    • Free Runner
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    • Billy's Brother
    Jason Maza
    Jason Maza
    • Billy's Brother
    • Dirección
      • Andrea Arnold
    • Guionista
      • Andrea Arnold
    • Todo el elenco y el equipo
    • Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro

    Opiniones de usuarios154

    7.367.1K
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    Opiniones destacadas

    9Stampsfightclub

    Staggering picture

    Friendless and unloved Mia (Jarvis) dreams of becoming a dancer and when her mum's new boyfriend arrives on the scene, everything changes for the teenager.

    Fish tank is an exceptional artistic creation, based on the purity of Andrea Arnold's script and appreciative direction whilst a debuting Katie Jarvis excels as the troubled isolated teenager, and what a feature this is.

    British cinema is some of the most dramatic and flinching cinema in the world. From Trainspotting to This is England there are always issues of realism and points to convey and with this 2009 appraised release we see more hard drama.

    The opening sequence follows Mia around the streets, slurring and shouting abuse at anyone in her radar and the coarse dialogue and minimal amount of sympathy is staggering. As if you had been slapped, this will instantly startle you into realizing the type of environment and lifestyle Mia is living in. The language will give Pulp Fiction a run for its money.

    Added as an attempt to justify the rural scene of Britain, Arnold gets it spot on as everything flows with little adjustment required. Everything is as it should be because everything has been so carefully planned, in particular the character development which will have many shedding a tear or two.

    Katie Jarvis' cold and unappreciative style is spot on for the protagonist and as the film goes through hard fights with families and spending time isolated in a deserted flat, we see the emotional desire of Mia. The ambition of becoming a dancer is exceptionally well produced, owing to the fact that the background is effectively established. The hard family life Mia is living inspires her to find a way out and her dancing is her motive to break free. This really does work up a treat with twists turns, ups and downs and a staggering climax that adds extra spice to the picture.

    At only 15 the central character certainly has a controversial agenda set for her. From sleeping with random strangers to drinking anything dangerous, Mia seems unfazed. Seeing her younger sister drinking beer with her mother in the next room will have mouths dropping.

    Thanks to this straight forward no messing attitude the plot can move forward and tell the audience of what real life entails and the cultural state we are living in at the moment.

    Some British films go out of their way to preach, such as This is England and Brassed off and whilst that isn't a bad quality, the enriching style of this film makes it flow and add extra drama continuously.

    The scene setting shots are exquisite, as if made from a Skins episode without the teen angst. The scene in the car is excellent and not to forget this film boasts an exceptional soundtrack that fits the mood as well as 2007's Hallam Foe.
    8benca

    Bitingly realistic, discomforting and hauntingly beautiful

    Fish Tank hits you deep and hard, in the soul. It drew me in to its world without me hardly noticing it - a world of ultra-realism, burnished, you must say, by some quite incredible performances from Katie Jarvis and the rest of the cast.

    One night of disturbed sleep after watching it and I am still in their world, out on the bleak and beautiful flatlands bordering Essex and London which so many people speed through every day as they journey between London and mainland Europe on the Eurostar trains. I myself have taken that journey a few times and wondered what the people's lives were like who lived in this strange landscape where London has parked so much of the stuff that it doesn't want to see - the giant container terminals, the power plants and the chemical works.

    Fish Tank perhaps gives a taste of those lives, but it does much more than that. Especially it gives us a heroine who we can't help caring for deeply, despite and partly because she is on the outside so nasty, rude and violent. Through some of the things she gets up to as she wonders around we see a natural love of life bursting to get out though. We also have an attractive and kind man come into the picture who, through his natural goodness, offers an outlet for her yearnings for understanding, fun, and intimacy.

    The story starts off slowly as we get to know 15-year old Mia, her family and the wider (and very limited) world around her. But it picks up and becomes tautly gripping at times - and it never slips into sentimentality or offers false redemption. It is all the better for that.
    bob the moo

    Impacting, gritty and very well made even if it is a little bit longer than the material can bear

    Considering how much positive word of mouth it got, Fish Tank came and went pretty sharpish in most cinemas – even those in a larger city such as where I live. This was a shame as it meant I had to keep an eye out to eventually catch the film. Set on a council estate things are typically grim and within the first few minutes of the film we are treated to sudden violence and extreme language – all seemingly par for the course rather than being something special that we are witnessing. In this world lives Mia, a 15 year old who lives with a younger sister and a mother who appears to be not much older than her. She gets in fights and practises dancing by herself in an abandoned flat near her own. Her life appears to change for the better when her mother gets a new boyfriend who is friendly, good fun and is not put off by the sudden aggression that is the signature of life in the family home.

    Writer/director Arnold quite impressed me with Wasp a few years ago and she stayed in my memory thanks partly to her shabby treatment at the Oscars (where, as the winner of her category, she had to receive the award in the aisle and do her speech from there – no stage for her), however Fish Tank she stays in my mind on the basis of her film-making ability. Fish Tank is not a perfect film but there is a lot to praise it for. Social-realism is nothing new but Arnold really hits the nail on the head from the start and delivers a simple slice of life that is played in the silences as much as it is in dialogue. There is a downside to this and it is one that most viewers will struggle to ignore – the running time. At two hours the film is just about 20 minutes or so longer than it can bear and, in all the silences, there are frequent areas that feel like dips.

    This is a minor thing though because the silences depend on the quality of the direction and of the performances – both of which are excellent. Arnold's use of the camera is great – not only in terms of framing shots but also in terms of movement as this is not a static one shot type of film. The best example of what I mean can be seen in the scene where Mia shows off her dancing for Connor, the camera is close to convey the small room to the audience but it is also delivered with such tension that you can feel what is happening as much as dread it happening. Of course the performances are key in making this type of thing work and everyone is great. In particular Jarvis is brilliantly convincing – most people can do the accent and the swagger but she captures the heart of the character, letting the viewer see it even while keeping it below layer after layer of defence mechanism. She is by far the star of the film and she makes it look easy. Wareing, Fassbender and a few others are all good in support but it is always support.

    The plot of the film is slight in a way but at the same time with the direction and the performances as good as they are there is always something going on and, as much as I would have liked it a little shorter, I would be at a loss to say what to cut out to make it that way. Fish Tank ends up as a very engaging and gritty drama thanks to Arnold's direction and Jarvis' very strong performance, it mostly avoids cliché and predictable plotting and the cold grey atmosphere of the whole film makes for a distinctive product. A great British film and very well worth seeing – how BAFTA managed to miss Arnold and Jarvis this year is a mystery to me.
    9Chris_Docker

    Right out of the water

    "All my films have started with an image," says director Andrea Arnold. "It's usually quite a strong image and it seems to come from nowhere. I don't understand the image at first or what it means, but I want to know more about it so I start exploring it, try and understand it and what it means. This is how I always start writing." What does the image of a fish tank conjure up for you? On the inside longing to look out, is fifteen-year-old Mia. Trapped in a housing estate. Trapped in a single parent family. Trapped by people around her she can't respect. Trapped in herself. For being fifteen. She has her own inner world, fighting to manifest itself . Fortified by cigarettes and alcohol she can kick in the door of the empty nearby flat. A bare floor. Her CD player. Practice her moves. A better dancer than those kids on the block she just nutted.

    Mia is quite content to carve out her own double life, f*ck you very much! Never mind she gets caught and nearly comes to grief trying to steal a horse. And social workers don't scare her. But mom's new boyfriend – that could be a pain! A real spanner in the works. Especially when he's so annoyingly nice.

    Under Andrea Arnold's hand, life on this inner city concrete backwater is suddenly very alive. Banalities become beautiful. Like sunlight through cracked glass. Vibrant, gritty and riveting, but in a way that entertains powerfully. As pulsating and funny as Trainspotting but without the yuck factor. Its momentum is overpowering. We never know what is going to come out of Mia's mouth or where events will lead. Each jaw-dropping new scene surprises yet seems the result of inexorable momentum. As if that wasn't enough, the story mercifully avoids kitchen-sink drama, excessive violence, drugs, getting pregnant, grand larceny, car crashes and all the other cliché-ridden devices to which cinema-goers are usually subjected. Tightly controlled, Fish Tank attacks with a potent and thought-provoking arsenal of story-telling.

    Andrea Arnold proved she could do hard-hitting realism with her award-winning debut, Red Road. Here she excels her earlier efforts but still imbibes many of the verité approaches and senses of discipline that have filtered down from the Dogme and Advance Party movements. Her 'strong initial image,' or lack of subservience to more traditional methodology, maybe reminds of the devotion to experimental, avant-garde cinema taken by artists-turned-filmmakers such as Steve McQueen (Hunger) or theme-over-story technicians such as Duane Hopkins (Better Things). Michael Fassbender, who took reality to new heights as Bobby Sands in Hunger, here plays the mystifying and warmly charismatic Connor (Mum's boyfriend).

    Arnold didn't allow actors to read the script beforehand. They were given their scenes only a few days before filming. For the part of Mia, she chooses a complete unknown with zero experience. Arnold spotted Katie Jarvis at a train station after drawing a blank with casting agencies. "She was on one platform arguing with her boyfriend on another platform, giving him grief." However the performance is achieved, Jarvis is electrifying. If Arnold wanted a 'real' person for the role, this seventeen-year-old takes over the screen with raw adolescent power. Says Arnold, "I wanted a girl who would not have to act, could just be herself." Fish Tank will lift you out of your seat and on an unstoppable flight, ricocheting against confines of circumstance and imploding a dysfunctional family with its head of hormonal steam. Laugh, cry, hold on tight. You will need to. I could almost taste the vodka, as Mia goes through her Mum's dressing table drawers, bottle in hand. I wish all British films were this good.
    7drbarrera

    The hard reality of dysfunction

    This is a great film. It starts off a bit slow but I believe it serves a purpose. The filmmaker did a great job of portraying the characters in the film but exposing just enough to make the second half of the film come together in a way that helps you see the characters more deeply. Katie Jarvis did a wonderful job in painting a picture of an angry 15 year old 'Mia'. Why is she so angry? You can take a look at Kierston Wareing's character of 'Joanna', the terrible excuse for a mother that puts the needs of her children second to her own needs of looking for love and acceptance in whoever will give it to her. The mother finds this acceptance in Fassbender's character, 'Connor', who seems to be a great and unlikely catch for her. He seems to be a ray of light for the family but turns out to be just the opposite. My opinion is that the story is not about the damage the family experiences in the interaction with Connor but rather the reality that this is just one example of a series of bad decisions made by the mother that propels the children into a world of emotional pain and disappointment. It's also a picture of the cycle of dysfunction that is taking place in a family and the poor decisions that continue to keep that dysfunction in place. There is a glimmer of hope with Mia (her desire to help an old horse) but it is such a faint glimmer that it doesn't leave the viewer thinking that much will change with this family. There are some very hard hitting scenes in the movie that leave you on the edge of your seat saying, "I CAN'T BELIEVE THIS IS HAPPENING!" and there are some scenes that really make you feel sorry for the characters and you can really see some of them as victims, especially the children. Overall, great movie and I highly, highly recommend it.

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    Argumento

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    ¿Sabías que…?

    Editar
    • Trivia
      Katie Jarvis, who plays Mia, had never acted before this film. A casting director spotted her having a fight with her boyfriend at a train station and offered her the role.
    • Errores
      As Mia is leaving the dance audition, she passes a mirrored wall and the cameraman and his equipment is clearly reflected.
    • Citas

      Tyler: [buries face in Mia's abdomen] I hate you!

      Mia: [tenderly] I hate you, too.

    • Conexiones
      Featured in The Rotten Tomatoes Show: Daybreakers/Leap Year/Youth in Revolt (2010)
    • Bandas sonoras
      Me & U
      Performed by Cassie Ventura (as Cassie) featuring Sean 'Diddy' Combs (as Diddy) & Yung Joc

      Written by Ryan Leslie

      Published by Aspen Songs

      Administered by Kobalt Music Publishing Ltd

      Licensed courtesy of Warner Music UK Ltd

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    Preguntas Frecuentes20

    • How long is Fish Tank?Con tecnología de Alexa

    Detalles

    Editar
    • Fecha de lanzamiento
      • 28 de enero de 2011 (México)
    • Países de origen
      • Reino Unido
      • Países Bajos
    • Sitio oficial
      • BBC Films (United Kingdom)
    • Idioma
      • Inglés
    • También se conoce como
      • Câu Chuyện Về Mia
    • Locaciones de filmación
      • Mardyke Estate, Rainham, Essex, Inglaterra, Reino Unido(Mardyke Estate has since been renamed "Orchard Village" and substantially rebuilt or demolished)
    • Productoras
      • BBC Film
      • UK Film Council
      • Limelight Communication
    • Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro

    Taquilla

    Editar
    • Presupuesto
      • USD 3,000,000 (estimado)
    • Total en EE. UU. y Canadá
      • USD 374,675
    • Fin de semana de estreno en EE. UU. y Canadá
      • USD 25,854
      • 17 ene 2010
    • Total a nivel mundial
      • USD 2,404,300
    Ver la información detallada de la taquilla en IMDbPro

    Especificaciones técnicas

    Editar
    • Tiempo de ejecución
      • 2h 3min(123 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Mezcla de sonido
      • Dolby Digital
    • Relación de aspecto
      • 1.37 : 1

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