Due to a high volume of active users and service overload, we had to decrease the quality of video streaming. Premium users remains with the highest video quality available. Sorry for the inconvinience it may cause. Donate to keep project running.
We are currently experiencing technical difficulties with our servers. We hope to have this resolved soon. This issue doesn't affect premium users.
Get Premium
Watch on MixDrop/MyStream
Oops...
Something went wrong
Try again later.
Something went wrong
Try again later.
Here You can choose a playback server.
A Fish Called Wanda
Description
The exciting American diamond mistress Wanda and her boyfriend Otto in England to plan alongside George and Ken to steal a set of diamonds. Wanda and Otto want to get the stolen diamonds for themselves, and inform the police about George and do not know that he has moved the diamonds to another secret place. Wanda believes that the best way to know where the diamond is is to approach George's lawyer.
The exciting American diamond mistress Wanda and her boyfriend Otto in England to plan alongside George and Ken to steal a set of diamonds. Wanda and Otto want to get the stolen diamonds for themselves, and inform the police about George and do not know that he has moved the diamonds to another secret place. Wanda believes that the best way to know where the diamond is is to approach George's lawyer.
Actors:
Tom Georgeson,
Charu Bala Chokshi,
Patricia Hayes,
Michael Percival,
Llewellyn Rees,
Peter Jonfield,
Chris Chering
Tom Georgeson
8 August 1937, Liverpool, England, UK
Charu Bala Chokshi
Patricia Hayes
22 December 1909, Wandsworth, London, England, UK
Michael Percival
Llewellyn Rees
18 June 1901, Charmouth, Dorset, England, UK
Peter Jonfield
Chris Chering
Director:
John Cleese ,
Charles Crichton
John Cleese
27 October 1939, Weston-Super-Mare, Somerset, England, UK
Charles Crichton
6 August 1910, Wallasey, Cheshire, England, UK
Country:
United Kingdom, United States
Keywords:
#A Fish Called Wanda #Charles Crichton #Jamie Lee Curtis #John Cleese #John Cleese #Kevin Kline
COMMENTS (0)
Sort by
Newest
Newest
Oldest
YOU MAY ALSO LIKE
April 27, 2009
Like many of the best English comedies, much of the humor here is based on character, good-natured high spirits, and fairly uninhibited vulgarity.
July 30, 2013
A Fish Called Wanda is vintage black comedy, British-style -- a cruel, dastardly, down-and-dirty jewel-robbery romp that pits thief against thief, while entangling an innocent bystander in the web of greed, romance and decidedly cockeyed high jinks.
July 30, 2013
There are a few hilarious moments, and a few more that are foolish and even disgusting.
July 30, 2013
Putting heart and heat into a film that could have easily slid by on silliness, Cleese proves himself a master actor.
July 30, 2013
Cleese's cracking script gives it a solid foundation, but it's the supporting cast who make this movie wanda-ful.
April 27, 2009
Wanda defies gravity, in both senses of the word, and redefines a great comic tradition.
July 30, 2013
Somehow, the movie manages to do the impossible: It makes John Cleese less than hilarious.
July 30, 2013
As in most of his Python parts... Cleese's character is an extended riff on the concept of pomposity. But Archie is more leavened with humanity than any of his other roles.
July 30, 2013
Low comedy at high speed, it pretends to be a caper movie about a smooth London jewel heist and its infinitely complex aftermath. Actually, it's a smart farce about ingrained cultural differences.
July 30, 2013
This hilarious tale of criminal incompetence and transatlantic eccentricity is easily John Cleese's finest achievement since Fawlty Towers.
July 30, 2013
The movie's basic joke holds that the overbearing, unselfconscious Americans will do anything and say anything (and usually as loudly as possible), while the timorous British are nearly too polite to breathe.
July 30, 2013
Perhaps the most unusual aspect of what is surely the year's most original and daring comedy is that John Cleese is not the funniest performer in it. Believe it or not, that honor goes to none other than the usually somber Kevin Kline.

