Fishtales

Fishtales

Theatrical release poster
Directed by Alki David
Produced by Alki David
Billy Zane (co-producer)
Written by Alki David
Melissa Painter
Starring Kelly Brook
Billy Zane
Alki David
Amber Savva
Cinematography Aggelos Viskadourakis
Edited by Alki David
Distributed by Screen Media Films, 111 Pictures
Release dates
24 August 2007
Running time
94 minutes
Country United Kingdom
Greece
Language English
Greek
Budget 10 million
Box office 19,324,345[1]

Fishtales is a 2007 family comedy film directed by Alki David, and starring Billy Zane and Kelly Brook about a widowed father who falls in love with a mermaid. The film was released theatrically in the UK on 24 August 2007.

At the time of filming, co-stars Billy Zane and Kelly Brook were engaged to be married, but they have since split. This is the second film that the couple have worked on together, the previous being 2005's Survival Island, where they met.

Plot

Widowed Classics Professor Thomas Bradley (Billy Zane) is about to lose his research grant studying ancient love spells at Oxford University. He knows he is close to a major academic breakthrough and desperately needs more time to complete his research. Thomas is given one last chance to finish his work, and goes to the Greek island of Spetses, where he has been invited to stay at the home of a supportive Oxford don Professor Coulter. Thomas brings along his 12-year-old daughter, Serena (Amber Savva). The house is in tolerable condition, and Serena finds a book about merpeople that has an ancient Greek inscription on the cover.

Serena is supportive of her father and readily asks him about ancient mythology, but feels that he dedicates too much of himself to his work. The pair meet a fisherman named Captain Mavros (Alki David) and his son Dimitri (Felix Yanez); Dimitri develops a romantic crush on Serena.

Neried (Kelly Brook), a mermaid who can only take human form at night, travels on land to meet Thomas. When they initially cannot get along, Serena asks that Neried only help her father translate some old relics for his work. Neried does, and when she and Thomas speak the ancient love spell in unison, they fall deeply in love with each other. Thomas realizes that the writing on the book Serena had discovered earlier is the key to understanding all of the ancient text, enabling him to continue his work.

Cast

Soundtrack

Production

The film was shot on location on the Greek Island of Spetses during the summer of 2006, with extra footage filmed later in London.

Director Alki David, an avid dive enthusiast, paid particular attention to the quality of the underwater sequences. Specialist equipment was required to achieve the underwater scenes in the film.

During shooting for the film, Brook, when attempting to surface between shots, hit her head on the underside of a rock and almost drowned in her full costume.[2]

Brook had a stunt and body double for the portions of the film that involved swimming beyond her ability, the job was given to a 29-year-old free-diver from Cornwall. The double, Hannah Stacey, used to hold the UK's free diving woman's record of 54 m (177 ft) on a single breath.

Both Brook and Stacey wore tails that were molded individually to fit each of them and took three and a half months to build.

Publicity still.

Release and response

The film premiered at the Cannes Film Festival in 2007, where it received very poor reviews and some critics walked out before the film had finished. One critic claimed 'This is the worst movie I've seen in a very long time I fell asleep within the first 15 minutes'[3][4]

It was released theatrically in August 2007 across the UK, USA and Canada.

It was released on DVD in August 2008 across the USA and Canada.

References

  1. ?
  2. "Kelly Brook Almost Killed By Fishtales". Celebrity Gossip. 2007-05-28. Retrieved 2008-08-18.
  3. Harmsworth, Andrei (2007-05-18). "Kelly and Billy's wet 'Fishtales' flops". Metro.co.uk. Retrieved 2008-08-18.
  4. "Kelly Brook and fiance Billy's film bombs in Cannes". DailyMail.co.uk. 2007-05-18. Retrieved 2008-08-18.

External links

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