Film Review – The Pout-Pout Fish

Screenwriters Elise Allen and Elie Choufany don’t have it easy when trying to figure out just what story to tell with “The Pout-Pout Fish.” It’s an adaptation of a 2008 children’s book by Deborah Diesen, who offered readers 32 pages of simple life lessons and colorful characters. The material has been turned into a 90-minute-long movie, requiring a significant boost in drama and adventure to help support a feature-length version of the literary success story, with Diesen moving on to create dozens of sequels and spin-offs, keeping a good thing going. As a film, “The Pout-Pout Fish” doesn’t have much in common with the book, electing to generate its own saga of lessons and exploration for its film debut, definitely lifting ideas from other animated hits, especially 2003’s “Finding Nemo.” Directors Ricard Cusso and Rio Harrington manage to keep things lively and charming in the offering, finding humor and a sense of discovery, even if fans of the original book might be slightly bewildered by what the endeavor does to reach a sellable run time. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

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