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Fish Story Full Movie In Hindi Free Download Hd 1080p

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  4. Fish Story Full Movie In Hindi Free Download Hd 1080p
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  57. In the year 2012 a comet approaches earth, threatening to end civilization when it impacts. On the streets of Japan, a single music store remains open, its proprietor insisting to his customers that the world is not coming to an end. He plays a forgotten song recorded by an obscure band 37 years ago, and insists that somehow, this song will save the world. A series of short stories spans the years from the recording of the song in 1975 to the modern day, and shows how--in roundabout fashion--the man in the music store is absolutely right.
  58. The fish story is indeed a punk rock song cribbed from a book by an incompetent translator who did not appreciate the significance of the English term, &quot;Fish story.&quot; It is also a collection of seemingly diverse people loosely related to the punk rockers who cut the record. It is not at all clear what most of these people have to do with one another. All, however, is clarified in the end.<br/><br/>I don&#39;t know that I have ever seen a movie structured in quite this way in which the actual relationships among the characters is all sorted out in a sort of coda. There is a comet that seems about to destroy the planet until it is blown up by an Indian space crew with one Japanese member, who is, of course, related to all the punk rockers in an unlikely way.<br/><br/>The Japanese have made other films based on the &quot;rock and roll song that saves the world,&quot; motif. I can&#39;t think of a single on from America but there must be one somewhere. The other great example that comes to mind is The 20th Century Boys III in which the hero gets to sing his song and there is a truly touching scene in which he is reunited with his niece whom he raised.<br/><br/>There is little or nothing so touching here and there is one loose end in which the first character on the screen, a man in an electric wheel chair wanders into a record store, open for no logical reason on the day that the comet strikes, but he is simply shuffled aside at the end and really has only the role of a sort of chorus.
  59. What the Fish!!! So I&#39;d thought that it&#39;ll be somewhat of a chore to sit through almost two hours late into what&#39;s left of a Friday night with Fish Story, directed by Yoshihiro Nakamura and based on the novel by Kotaro Isaka. But I was utterly blown away, leaving me feet tapping and head bobbing all the way through to the end credits roll, and a smile plastered on my face all the way home. It&#39;s an Armageddon film done with pizazz and creative flair, and not to mention that dash of comedy and great music, that I&#39;d feel is a hard act for the rest of the festival lineup to keep within touch for the Audience Choice. I know it&#39;s still early in the festival, but Fish Story has established itself as one of the best films I&#39;ve watched this year, and one of the rare few that will likely give you that familiar fuzzy feeling after you&#39;ve sat through an awesome film.<br/><br/>The story unveils itself in non-linear fashion, and somewhat like Sandcastle, has a little lingering mystery - a punk rock song that contains a minute&#39;s silence - to what it actually all means, which comes altogether as a climax when everything gets to show hand. It tackles that wonderment of how events in the past will inevitably shape what&#39;s to come in the future, even if it doesn&#39;t make sense in the present. And Nakamura takes this premise, and through the narrative structure enables the audience to experience just that. We&#39;re brought from timeline to timeline that at the point of presentation the scenes seem disparate to one another and don&#39;t make much sense, but contains enough in their individual segments to entertain. <br/><br/>Hinging on a song called Fish Story that&#39;s performed by a punk rock band called Gekirin, it&#39;s amazing just what this one song can do to carry the entire film, not only because it sounds great (those not into punk rock, I&#39;d think you&#39;d find it hard not to enjoy this, especially when the cast members go into overdrive in their performance), but has an intriguing story on how it got produced, that forms the bulk of the film. Like most songs that seem fated to fade into obscurity without proper promotional or marketing power or fans to ensure some longevity, or worst, a band that&#39;s being condemned as talentless and to be let go by their record company, little do the band members know that one day this song will just about save humankind.<br/><br/>And in that respect, with Japanese fantasy/sci-fi stories in a similar mould such as the Twentieth Century Boys trilogy, Fish Story tackles the same doomsday scenario, and that plot element of a song of hope yet unfulfilled and unexplained, in a succinct fashion that doesn&#39;t meander unnecessarily. Spanning almost 40 years, we&#39;re treated to one off stories such as a timid driver (Gaku Hamada, resembling a youthful looking Jackie Chan with that hairdo he spots) who finds some resolve to stand up for himself and for others after being told of a prophecy about saving the world, and another tale where a young cook onboard a ferry saving a schoolgirl (Mikako Tabe) and other passengers from gun totting hijackers. They&#39;re as disparate as they can get, and if you&#39;re wondering just what&#39;s going on when you see recurring characters or instances in each, I&#39;d say to enjoy the moments crafted, from a tinge of horror to an all out action-adventure, before the payload at the end truly hits you.<br/><br/>All these and more, based upon the single introduction set in the year 2012, where the world is threatened by a comet on a collision course for Earth, and a group of strangers gathering in a niche music shop. It&#39;s 5 hours to impact, and the shopkeeper whips out the rare Fish Story vinyl record for them all to give a listen to, thinking that it&#39;s quite futile to head toward Mount Fuji to avoid an impending tsunami scenario, and of course hoping for a miracle to come from a country that on one hand is not expected, and on the other totally plausible for the maths and science experts it produces.<br/><br/>There are references to other Japanese icons such as Godzilla and Go-Rangers, and for fans of Hollywood films, you&#39;ll probably be able to identify the oh-so-funny references and cheeky dissing of films from The Karate Kid (not the Jackie Chan version though), and Michael Bay&#39;s Armageddon, in fact &quot;quoting&quot; the what-if scenario of having the nuclear bombs on the comet, but yet to be exploded because, well, of what happened to Bruce Willis. Some stories are played out in tongue-in-cheek fashion, and they complement one another really well, which of course makes the finale all the more fun, especially when everything starts to make sense, and goes the full circle.
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