FILM REVIEW
Young Chang
The character of Poinsettia sits herself down on the table in one
scene of “The Annihilation of Fish” and shakes her head. This is a first,
she says -- getting dumped for a demon. She proceeds to drink.
Poinsettia, played by Lynn Redgrave, doesn’t find it at all strange
that Fish (James Earl Jones) wrestles with demons. She, too, once had a
friend the rest of the world couldn’t see -- famous Italian composer
Giacomo Puccini. The two wanted to get married, but couldn’t because
state laws demanded that both partners be present at the wedding, the
opera fanatic says. So she broke up with him.
Now, in a new town (Los Angeles), on weary, widowed feet, the
opera-fanatic is heartbroken that her new lover Fish would rather see
less of her than ward away his demons, who seem to be visiting less
frequently since he coupled up with Poinsettia.
Produced by Paul Heller, William Lawrence Fabrizio and John Remark,
and directed by Charles Burnett, this odd yet somehow touching love story
of two unlikely-to-bond souls will stay with you for awhile.
It’s a slow film -- with a sharp, surprising and imaginative script --
that sucks you into the strangest little world of three lonely,
delusional seniors and drops you back into reality, somehow, smiling.
* ‘The Annihilation of Fish’ will screen at 4 p.m. Sunday at Edwards
Island 7 Cinemas.
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