A Fish Called Wanda



"Otto: "You know your problem? You don't like winners." Archie: "Winners?" Otto: "Winners." Archie: "Winners like... North Vietnam?""

A Fish Called Wanda is a 1988 British comedy film starring Kevin Kline, Jamie Lee Curtis, John Cleese and Michael Palin. The film is the final--and best known--film of legendary British comedy director Charles Crichton and its screenplay was written by Cleese and Crichton.

The film features a gang of criminals who double-cross each other and involves the comedic use of a steamroller.

Nominated for the Oscar for Best Original Screenplay, the film is literally lethally funny (see below). Kline, who plays the eccentric thief Otto in the film, won the Academy Award for Best Actor in a Supporting Role, a rare accomplishment for a comedic performance.

There are actually two characters called Wanda in the film. One is a fish. The other is Jamie Lee Curtis.

Later followed by a not-sequel with the same cast, Fierce Creatures.

"Otto: I love watching your ass when you walk! Is that beautiful or what? Don't go near him, he's MINE!"
 * Amusing Injuries: Poor Ken.
 * And that poor dog.
 * Arson, Murder, and Jaywalking: "A tale of murder, lust, greed, revenge, and seafood."
 * Author Appeal: Cleese and Crichton both had scenes they specifically wanted included, whatever form the final film took: a stutterer trying to spit out vital information, and a character being run over by a steamroller.
 * Ax Crazy: Otto, but it's more Played for Laughs.
 * Berserk Button: Don't call Otto stupid, or hurt Wanda (the fish).
 * Otto isn't pleased with the prospect of Wanda touching Archie's dick, either.
 * Bilingual Bonus: Knowing some Italian and/or Russian makes some scenes all the more hilarious.
 * And Latin.
 * The film's ending title card, "FIN," also counts, as it is the French equivalent of "The End."
 * Brief Accent Imitation: Archie and Otto exchange dueling examples
 * Brown Note: The film is unique in cinema in that it is actually so funny as to prove a Real Life example. In 1989 a Danish audiologist named Ole Bentzen died of laughter watching it. The film made him laugh so hard that his heart lethally beat upwards up 500 beats a minute.
 * The Cameo: Stephen Fry has a 30 second part towards the climax as a man at the airport Otto mugs for his ticket.
 * Geoffrey Palmer also appears, as the Judge in George's trial.
 * Contrived Clumsiness: Otto, angry with Wanda, picks up a framed photo of her and smashes it with his fist. He then hands it to the owner, and flatly says "Oh, sorry".
 * Crazy Jealous Guy: Otto over Wanda
 * Deadpan Snarker: Trademark dry delivery of humorous lines by John Cleese.
 * Die Laughing: Read Brown Note
 * Eagle Land: Otto is every American stereotype rolled into one.
 * Emotionally Tongue-Tied: Otto and the word "sorry".
 * Enemy Eats Your Lunch / Interrogation by Vandalism: Played With when Otto torments K-k-ken by eating his fishes... alive.
 * Everything Sounds Sexier in French: In this case Gratuitous Italian. Or Gratuitous Russian.
 * Faux Yay: Otto pulls this on Ken to distract him from Wanda's activities.

"Judge: Mr. Leach... Darling? Archie: Yes, sweetie?"
 * Femme Fatale: Wanda, who is planning on stabbing every guy she gets involved with in the back (even Otto -- when they think the loot is safely locked in the safe at the lock-up, she's seconds away from koshing Otto and running off with it before they realize it's empty). Then she ends up falling in love with Archie for real.
 * Freudian Slip: "They're so fucking lawyer--uh, superior", as well as Archie's "Wanda" and "Darling!" in the courtroom scene.

"Archie: You are a true vulgarian, aren't you? Otto: You're the vulgarian, you fuck!"
 * Gambit Pileup: The robbers' conflicting plans to outgambit each other.
 * Gene Hunt Interrogation Technique: Otto stuffs food up Ken's nose while holding him prisoner. He then speaks at length about philosophy, and then starts to eat Ken's fish raw so he'll tell him what he wants. Hilarious.
 * Hand or Object Underwear: John Cleese covers his genitals with a photograph when the owners of a flat arrive unexpectedly.
 * I Resemble That Remark:

"Otto: Don't call me stupid! Wanda: Oh, right! To call you stupid would be an insult to stupid people!"
 * Insult to Rocks

"Wanda: "Now let me correct you on a couple of things, okay? Aristotle was not Belgian. The central message of Buddhism is not 'Every man for himself.' And the London Underground is not a political movement. Those are all mistakes, Otto. I looked them up.""
 * Jerkass: Otto.
 * Know-Nothing Know-It-All: Otto.

""Look, it's K-k-k-Ken, c-c-c-c-coming to k-k-k-k-kill me! How are you gonna c-c-c-c-catch me, K-k-k-k-ken??""
 * Large Ham: Kevin Kline gleefully chews the scenery in the movie, winning an Oscar in the process.
 * Laughably Evil: Again, Otto.
 * Ms. Fanservice: Jamie Lee Curtis
 * Mutilation Interrogation: The fish tank scene.
 * Nervous Wreck: Ken.
 * Nietzsche Wannabe: Otto, literally.
 * Ironically, he seems to be more knowledgable about the subject then most other wannabes, and indeed it seems to be the one thing he isn't a Small Name, Big Ego about.
 * Ominous Latin Chanting: "Have mercy, O Lord, the dog is dead".
 * One Mario Limit: This trope (or the reaction to its aversion) is one of the many examples of Otto's stupidity. When he hears that Archie's daughter is named Portia (a homophone of "Porsche"), he asks why on earth he would name her after a car.
 * One Steve Limit: Averted, between Wanda the fish and Wanda the woman.
 * Ordered Apology
 * Plethora of Mistakes: The robbery goes off without a hitch. After that...
 * Rule of Three: Otto is repeatedly involved in car crashes or near crashes, the first two times running the same dark red car off the road, and the third time having a minor collision with a light blue car - at the same time alerting Archie that Otto is escaping with his car. In each occasion he calls the other driver an asshole, followed - or preceded in the actual crash - with a metallic crunching noise. (Being an American, he keeps forgetting to drive on the left.)
 * Running Gag: "ASSHOLE!"
 * Shout-Out/Genius Bonus: John Cleese's character is called Archie Leach, which was Cary Grant's real name.
 * Sleeping Single (See Unfair Sex below)
 * Speech Impediment: Ken's, much mocked by Otto.


 * Michael Palin researched stuttering extensively so as to not needlessly offend stutterers in the name of comedy.
 * Palin's father had a stammer, and Palin himself helped set up the Michael Palin Centre for Stammering Children in London. He is Vice President of the charity Action for Stammering Children.
 * Stealth Pun: Most movies have "The End". This one has "Fin".
 * "Fucking Limey cement!"
 * Sympathetic Adulterer: Archie.
 * Tap on the Head: "Ciao, stupidissimo!"
 * Otto does the same thing later to Stephen Fry.
 * Too Dumb to Live: How did someone as stupid as Otto ever work for the CIA?
 * Like most things, he's probably lying.
 * The Unfair Sex: Subverted with Archie and his wife.
 * Unpronounceable Alias: Mr. Manfrenjensen...den
 * Made hilarious when the person it's being given to goes on to pronounce it perfectly.
 * Unspoken Plan Guarantee: During the character introductions, the film cuts back to George's flat just as he's finished explaining his plan, so we only get to hear about "the middle bit... about the police". The rest of the plan goes off almost without a hitch.
 * Video Credits: Over the opening credits, to introduce the main players.
 * What Happened to the Mouse?: Archie & Wanda (and Ken) get their happily ever afters, while Otto goes to work for the South African government... but they just left George sitting in jail.
 * They didn't explicitly reveal what happened to him, but Archie told George that Wanda's statements in court meant that he was now certain to be jailed for a long time, and that only implicating Wanda, Ken and Otto in the robbery could reduce the sentence. Since Archie never brought them to account, we can assume that George got the original, very long sentence.
 * Then again, since it was quite apparent that his barrister was having a "relationship" with the key witness, it's possible that a mistrial could've been declared.
 * Where Are They Now? Epilogue: Parodied:
 * William Telling: In the bank heist in the beginning, as the four thieves are about to get away with their bank heist, Otto pulls an apple out of his sack and places it on a bystander's head. He readies his crossbow, scaring the bystander, but he's stopped by Wanda (not the fish) before he can pull the trigger.