Big Fish

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Big Fish
Directed by Tim Burton
Produced by Bruce Cohen
Dan Jinks
Richard D. Zanuck
Written by John August &
Daniel Wallace (novel)
Starring Ewan McGregor
Billy Crudup
Albert Finney
Jessica Lange
Matthew McGrory
Helena Bonham Carter
Steve Buscemi
Alison Lohman
Danny DeVito
Music by Danny Elfman
Distributed by Columbia Pictures
Release date(s) December 10, 2003 (USA)
Running time 125 minutes
Language English
Budget $70 million
All Movie Guide profile
IMDb profile

Big Fish is a 2003 film directed by Tim Burton and written by John August, starring Ewan McGregor, Albert Finney, Billy Crudup and Jessica Lange. It is loosely based on the novel Big Fish: A Novel of Mythic Proportions by Daniel Wallace.

Big Fish received four Golden Globe nominations and one Oscar nomination for Danny Elfman's original score. The film is much less gothic than some of Burton's other works such as Edward Scissorhands and Sleepy Hollow.

Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.

The film follows the incredible life story of Edward Bloom (McGregor/Finney) and his strained relationship with his son, Will (Crudup). Will hasn't talked to his father for years, following an incident that strengthened his belief that his father was a liar who didn't care about his family. He approaches him again only after he learns that his father is dying. The tension between father and son is very real and seems as though the two cannot reconcile their differences.

Through flashbacks, Will tries to recall and piece together the stories his father used to tell him about his many adventures and how he lived his life, which he believes to be just tall tales and impossible to believe. Bloom's stories contain fantasy elements: a witch, a giant, a werewolf, and so on, showing him as a lucky hero with few personal flaws.

Will sets out to grasp the idea behind these stories and to discover the truth about the real Edward Bloom. When it all comes together, it turns out that Edward's "unbelievable stories" are shown to have some element of truth (e.g., Will meets a giant who is very tall, though smaller than his father had made him out to be.) At the end, Will realizes he made a mistake in not trusting his father, and that he needs to open his mind more and be less cynical; finally, he manages to come to terms with his father's need to live an extraordinary life. In the final moments of his father's life, Will concocts a wild story that sends his father Edward to the river, where he turns into a fish.

The ending of the movie is bittersweet in the sense that before Edward Bloom passed away, his son managed to forgive his father for all his deception. However, the ending proves that without a doubt his father's stories were indeed based on true events, although exaggerated (e.g., the Siamese twins were actually twins but each had their own body; the giant was a tall man; etc.)

Spoilers end here.


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