Little Fish

Clip 3: ‘We’re no-one, we’re nobody’

3 min 4 sec ( skip to teachers’ notes)

Taken from the feature Little Fish (2005)

Original title classification MA – this clip chosen to be M

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Availability of the complete title

This clip contains medium-level coarse language.

Curator’s clip description

Tracy (Cate Blanchett), her brother Ray (Martin Henderson) and her boyfriend Jonny (Dustin Nguyen) have driven from Sydney to an isolated farm, to buy a large amount of amphetamines. At the farm, they find Lionel Dawson (Hugo Weaving), dying of heroin overdose. Steve Moss (Joel Tobeck), the seller in the deal, tries to rip them off but Tracy will not give him the money. She tells Moss that killing them will ruin his life and that he must let them go.

Curator’s notes

A culminating scene of amazing originality and power in which the film’s theme comes strongly into focus. Tracy convinces Moss that his actions will have terrible consequences for himself. The idea that we must choose, every day, to do the right or the wrong thing, and that we all have to live with those choices, is powerfully brought home.

Paul Byrnes, curator

Teachers’ notes

provided by The Le@rning Federation

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This clip shows a night scene in which Tracy (Cate Blanchett) and boyfriend Jonny (Dustin Nguyen) crouch over the body of Lionel (Hugo Weaving). Steve, the dealer (Joel Tobeck), appears and punches Tracy’s brother Ray (Martin Henderson) to the ground, telling them to get the money from the car. Tracy refuses and when Jonny locks the car, Steve draws a gun. Undeterred, Tracy threatens that they will go to the police if Steve takes the money, but if he doesn’t take it, he won’t hear from them again. Anxiously they take the body, get into the car and leave. A low, sustained undercurrent of music supports the rising tension of the clip.

Educational value points

  • This climactic scene from Little Fish has all the elements of the crime genre, but unlike many crime films the scene is concluded not by violent action but by non-violent character interaction. At the heart of this scene is the revelation of Tracy’s increased strength and determination as she appeals to the dangerous and desperate dealer ‘to just think’. Unlike many crime films the female character controls the action and determines the outcome.
  • Stark lighting and the use of hand-held cameras help to imbue this scene with a heightened sense of reality. The use of flare lenses and stark lighting results in strong contrasts between dark areas and very bright ones, such as when a light flares directly into the camera over the shoulder of one of the characters. These techniques, along with the jerky nature of the filming, create a sense of authenticity.
  • The soundtrack helps to maintain the tension in this scene. There are long pauses within the dialogue as both parties assess the situation and Tracy, Jonny and Ray watch Steve with growing concern. A portentous drone-like music score, the sounds of breathing and the background sounds of night insects all merge into an atmospheric background to the sparse exchanges and mounting tension.
  • Cate Blanchett’s fine acting skills are demonstrated in this scene from Little Fish, for which she won an AFI Award for Best Lead Actress. Cate Blanchett, a graduate of the National Institute of Dramatic Art (NIDA), has starred in many films, including Elizabeth (1998), Lord of the Rings (2001, 2002, 2003) and Babel (2006) and, with her husband Andrew Upton, will commence the artistic co-directorship of the Sydney Theatre Company in 2008.
  • Scriptwriter Jacqueline Perske was nominated for an AFI award for the screenplay of Little Fish, which benefited from inclusion in the inaugural, and now acclaimed, Aurora script program (NSW Film and Television Office). Perske interviewed people involved in the heroin trade to ensure authenticity in characterisation. She won AFI awards in 2005 and 2006 for the television drama series Love My Way.
  • As seen in this clip, director Rowan Woods’s work is characterised by immediacy and focuses on developing tension between actors and authenticity through close, calculated camerawork. Woods’s first film The Boys (1998) won four AFI awards and Little Fish won five. Both films deal with a gritty reality and stress the daily grind of suburban life for people on low incomes, and both explore intimate relationships, violence and crime.
australian screen