IMDb 0 2025 HD

Catching the Big Fish

Catching the Big Fish

2025
Drama
6 min
0 IMDB

Set during the turbulent shift from silent to sound, this film intertwines the lives of a struggling filmmaker and a solitary fisherman. A meditation on creativity and change,…

Personnel // Cast & Crew

Director Jack Clegg
Starring
Jack Clegg / Cosmo Cinquetti / Nayan Handsome-Genius Cooper

How Viewers Describe This Film

Common themes and sentiments

meditative slow-paced artistic metaphorical visually poetic emotionally reserved intellectually stimulating niche appeal beautifully shot contemplative thematically rich narratively thin

Reviews

A
Anya Petrova
Mar 1, 2026
4.0 / 5
4.0

There is a rare and delicate courage in this film’s refusal to shout. In an age of cinematic noise, it dares to be about listening and waiting. The fisherman’s storyline is not a quaint diversion but the film’s…

B
Ben Carter
Mar 1, 2026
2.5 / 5
2.5

The concept is promising, but the execution of Catching the Big Fish is ultimately too languid and opaque for its own good. The metaphorical linkage between the two protagonists feels stretched thin over the runtime, leading to a…

C
Chloe Zhang
Mar 1, 2026
4.5 / 5
4.5

A masterful and moving meditation on obsolescence and grace. Catching the Big Fish captures the specific anxiety of an artistic revolution with a timeless emotional truth. The editing, weaving the two lives together, is sublime, suggesting a profound…

M
Marcus Thorne
Mar 1, 2026
3.5 / 5
3.5

This is a film of admirable ambition that sometimes feels more like an elegant thesis than a fully fleshed drama. The parallel between the fisherman and the filmmaker is intellectually compelling, visually striking, but occasionally too neat in…

E
Eleanor Vance
Mar 1, 2026
4.0 / 5
4.0

Catching the Big Fish is a beautifully austere poem of a film. Its power lies in the resonant silence between its two narratives, where the clatter of the emerging talkie industry meets the patient lap of water against…

FAQs

The film posits that artistic integrity is not about stubbornly refusing change, but about understanding what is essential in one's craft and holding onto it amidst the tumult. The 'big fish' is that elusive ideal of perfect expression. The message is neither triumphant nor defeatist, but rather a sober, beautiful acknowledgement that the value lies in the dedicated pursuit itself. In our own era of relentless digital disruption, this meditation on creativity and change feels strikingly relevant.