The Standard (St. Catharines)

‘Little Fish’ heartbreak­ing, relevant rumination

A society dealing with a common collective grief, loss, disease. Sound familiar?

- KATIE WALSH

About halfway through “Little Fish,” a romantic drama directed by Chad Hartigan, Emma, played by Olivia Cooke, poses an impossible, heartbreak­ing question to the audience in a narrated voice-over. “When your disaster is everyone’s disaster, how do you grieve?” It’s an idea we’ve all collective­ly had to contend with, 11 months into a pandemic that’s claimed over 2 million lives worldwide. How does one person deal with such devastatio­n in a way that captures the scope of such a tragedy?

That “Little Fish” feels so relevant is in a way, by design, as this is a film about living through a pandemic. Based on a short story by Aja Gabel, adapted for the screen by Mattson Tomlin, “Little Fish” is the love story of rock photograph­er Jude (Jack O’connell) and aspiring veterinari­an Emma, married in October 2021, told largely by Emma in a voiceover narration (in the soothing dulcet tones of Cooke’s native Mancunian accent) and in nonlinear flashbacks. This charming courtship and marriage could be perfect except for a global outbreak of a mysterious illness called Neuro-inflammato­ry Affliction, a cognitive decline that manifests as a persistent forgetfuln­ess. Soon, Jude starts forgetting.

Those with NIA forget the little things at first, and then the big ones. As people start to behave erraticall­y en masse, forgetting how to do their jobs, how to drive and where they are, society descends into chaos and disorder. NIA is similar to Alzheimer’s or dementia, except it’s people of all ages falling ill, a devastatin­g diagnosis for a teenager, or a new marries riage. As Emma points out, “How can you build a future if you keep having to rebuild the past?” As they witness the effects of the disease on a close friend, Ben (Raúl Castillo), and his partner, Samantha (Soko), Emma, a healer herself, asks Jude to remember their first kiss, their first date, their wedding.

Their love story becomes an anchor as they reinscribe their happy memories together over and over again as a kind of treatment, while exploring other options and clinical trials. It calls to mind films that traffic in the world of memory, from “Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind,” “Memento” and even the Adam Sandler rom-com “50 First Dates.” An ambient score by Keegan Dewitt blends with the hazy hand-held cinematogr­aphy by Sean Mcelwee, which gets hazier as Jude’s memories fade. The film’s naturalist­ic, lyrical esthetic is a dance down memory lane of Jude and Emma, their personal historeduc­ed to their time together, as they rewrite and remember their memories again and again.

Hartigan has a knack for sensitive, human dramas, and while “Little Fish” takes place in a near-future heightened reality, the story is relatable not only because we’re all living through a pandemic ourselves, dealing with grief and loss on a scale that ranges from the deeply personal to the impossibly large, but because this kind of loss is also very real. We lose loved ones like this all the time, grasping onto how we knew and loved them. The film eclipses its conceit, delicately examining both the unique pain that is the loss of intimacy and what makes us fall in love with someone again and again.

‘LITTLE FISH’; 3 stars

Cast: Olivia Cooke, Jack O’connell, Raúl Castillo, Soko.directed by Chad Hartigan. Running time: 1 hour, 41 minutes. Crave/starz Friday

 ?? IFC FILMS ?? Jack O’connell as Jude, left, and Olivia Cooke as Emma in a scene from Chad Hartigan’s “Little Fish.”
IFC FILMS Jack O’connell as Jude, left, and Olivia Cooke as Emma in a scene from Chad Hartigan’s “Little Fish.”

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