the metamorphoses
by Douglas Messerli
Michael
Cacoyannis (screenwriter and director) Όταν τα
ψάρια βγήκαν στη στεριά (Otan ta
psaria vgikan sti steria) (The Day the Fish Came Out) / 1967
Michael Cacoyannis’ 1967 film The Day the Fish Came Out has probably
received the worst reviews of any film of a noted international director. It
came out of a period in which campy, sometimes over-the-top comedies such as
Joseph Losey’s Modesty Blaise (1966)
were quite popular. And it shares some of the political satire of Stanley
Kubrick’s Dr. Strangelove and the
even earlier Jack Arnold piece of nonsense The
Mouse That Roared (1959)—both films for which I, myself, have little
admiration, and neither of which I see as truly “funny.”
Yet critics were particularly mean when it came to the Cacoyannis work,
since he had previously made grander epic realist productions such as Zorba the Greek and Electra. The New York Times reviewer,
Bosley Crowther, for example, described it as “flabby” and “foolish,” going on
to evaluate it as “a witless farcical account of how an unnamed, far-ranging
power tries to cover up the fact that one of its planes has accidentally
dropped some fissionable material on a barren, sleepy Greek island.” That
“unnamed country,” quite obviously was the USA.
Tom Milne of the usually insightful Time
Out summarized: “Cacoyannis turns it all into hideously lumbering farce, so
unconvincing that one is heartily glad when the unprepossessing characters at
least seem likely to be overwhelmed by radiation.”
Even the bland TV Guide called
it a “silly and pretentious nuclear disaster drama.”
This is the baseline story, but no one with any sense of humor might
care about this silly series of scary events. Cacoyannis makes it clear from
the very beginning, through an epilogue comically spoofing the Spanish event
and with slickly clever credits by Maurice Binder, that signals the fact that
his tale is not really about bombs and human destruction but is about an
entirely different issue: in this case a kind of metamorphosis of everything
and everyone in this dystopian world. If Karos begins as a sleepy village of
mostly old men and a few women, it ends up as a kind of sheik tourist and gay
paradise that, having achieved such a new identity, is simply required to be
destroyed given the moral judgments of the film’s audiences. In presenting his
theme, accordingly, Cacoyannis almost invites his viewer’s disdain in a way
that might at least reveal their own hypocrisy. But that’s taking a big chance,
which, in this case obviously, just didn’t pay off.
Perhaps seeing it in hindsight is
fortunate; today we can perceive the campy celebration of this film within a
different sexual context, if nothing else. Yet, it’s hard to even get hold of a
CD. I bought one of the very last copies off of Amazon to be able to view it.
Although I heard it sometimes appears on TV film channels, I’ve never been able
to catch it.
Upon witnessing their descent upon the island, the pilot and navigator
can only suppose they are a gay contingent of visitors, and one of the
outrageously dressed squadron members, spotting the boys in underwear, presumes
they have having sex among the rocks. Throughout, Cacoyannis shows as many male
ass shots as Hollywood films have always portrayed, if somewhat more subtly, of
their female sexpot heroines.
Like any good group of gay boys, these want to be alone (they need to
search the island for the missiles and deadly box, if you recall)! And,
eventually, to establish that separateness, they buy up an entire part of the
island and fence it off, suggesting that they are testing soil samples, etc.
for their new solar hotel. To please those in the island who do not own this
valueless property, they put them to work on creating a meaningless highway to
the site.
Although the military men might see the local peasants as backward and
uninformed, they quickly ring up the Greek national government with the news of
the proposed transformation of their island, determining to spiff up their
village for the deluge of possible new tourists. Their bare, whitewashed walls
are suddenly painted with bright pinks, blues, greens, yellows and other colors,
creating a virtual rainbow of colorful possibilities (get it?). Numerous homes
overnight become hotels. The road workers suddenly uncover a beautiful ancient
sculpture. The small island town, just like the military men, also experiences
a metamorphosis. Things here are suddenly very “gay,” in the older meaning of
that word.
Boats and boats of tourists, dressed in equally outrageous
Fellinesque-like costumes, suddenly descend upon the port of Karos. These are
the real gay boys along with their sexy girlfriends and wealthy women “benefactors,”
who further transform the island into a truly sexual paradise whose
visitor-inhabitants dance ridiculous Mikis Theodorakis-composed songs far into
the night. Suddenly the sleepy little island has become the mega hot-spot its
elderly citizens had always imagined was out of their reach.
Too bad there are still a few stubborn peasants, particularly one
fisherman and his wife, who, having discovered the large metal box are
determined to open it and find what they greedily believe is a cache of gold.
When they finally succeed, they discover only a few reddish-brown egg-shaped
containers, probably holding deadly viruses, most of which the fisherman throws
into the sea and a few of which he wife unknowingly tosses into the village’s
water source. The fish rise to the surface, dead (“fish,” one might remember, was
once a derogatory name for women in gay circles), and what looks like an
eclipse of the sun appears out of nowhere as a public broadcast microphoned
message is drowned out by their music. Tomorrow the US will see just such a
sight.
There will always be, suggests
Cacoyannis, a few hold-out cretins who cannot enter into the current of joy and
pleasure. These are called critics, I suspect, who always rip into all the fun.
Yesterday, when I shared the story of
this film with my thirty-seven-year-old friend, Pablo Capra, he suggested it
sounded much more interesting than Zorba
the Greek, a movie I’d dragged him to a few weeks earlier. Enough said.
Los Angeles, August 20, 2017
Reprinted from World Cinema Review (August 2017).




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