All1111.1111.110'. tertain CHARLES BRITTON Special to The Jewish News S hooting Fish, the new comedy by co-writer and director Stefan Schwartz, represents something of a throwback to the films of the '60s set in swinging London. We no long have the frenetically lib- erated air, but there's a good deal of determined larkyness and flash on dis- play. The film also has a disregard of plausibility that I found less cheerful than downright annoying. Dylan (Dan Futterman, last seen as the son in The Birdcage) is an American in London who has teamed up with Jez (Stuart Townsend); both were raised as penniless orphans — Jez in England's Our Lady of Suffering Orphanage and Dylan in the American Friendly Home for Boys — and each has dreamt of attaining the one thing he never had: a home. Together they plan to buy a house and, apparently, settle down. No, they're not supposed to be gay (although you could have fooled me); the third side of the triangle is Georgie (Kate Beckinsale), who has attracted both of them. She seems to be a secre- Charles Britton writes for Copley New Service. At The Movie shooting fish: I. slang, v. t. to swindle, to rip off to defraud. tarial temp, but we soon learn that she also is in the process of becoming an - M.D. Dylan and Jez have this really fantas- tic pad — too literally fantastic: They live in a natural-gas storage tank, one of those vast drums that expand and contract according to their contents. As with a lot of things about this movie, I didn't quite understand how they man- age to do this, for Schwartz isn't partic- ularly careful to fill in the details, evi- dently expecting us to go with the flow. But, hey, Dylan and Jez have fixed up their dwelling to a fare-thee-well; the space is presented as wonderfully curious, full of all sorts of odds and ends and strange inventions. The latter are the contributions of Jez, a kind of screwball inventor who can make amazing contraptions out of junk and other refuse. (The person actually responsible for these gizmos is Production Designer Max Gottlieb, whose most recent credit is The Full Monty.) Jez suffers from nerdishness, though, and has a terrible time chatting up the birds — er, I mean, speaking to young women. Dylan is the front man and quite a talker. As Shooting Fish begins, the boys have cooked up an elaborate and highly unlikely scam involving the sale of nonexistent advanced computers to various businessmen. Georgie, hired for the occasion, suspects them of wrongdoing, but their cover story is that they're modern-day Robin Hoods, taking from the undeserving rich and giv- ing to the poor, specifically a home for orphans. They don't mention that the orphans are themselves. That home they want, by the way, isn't any old house but a stately mansion, for which they have accu- mulated some 2 million pounds. _Midway in the film, one of their escapades catches up with them, and they land in prison for a while. The authorities give them a cell together, and they decorate it most delightfully. The Brits are so understanding about these things. The plot is full of supposedly amus- ing twists, some of which are hard to follow. I don't believe that I blacked out at any time during the screening, so quite a bit of continuity got lost some- where. Anyway, the characters suddenly find themselves with a racehorse that is either worth a fortune in stud fees or is a nag ready for the gluepot, depending on which scene in the movie you choose to believe. And the plot introduces a home for children with Down's syndrome that is in danger of being shut down by some Above: Writer/Director Stefan Schwartz on the set of "Shooting Fish." Left: Stuart Townsend (Jez), Kate Beckinsale (Georgie) and Dan Futterman (Dylan) star in Stefan Schwartz's "Shooting Fish." nasty guys. There's a funeral, too, but you'll have to figure that one out yourself. Oh, yes, and there's a race that the horse simply has to win, otherwise the children will be thrown out of their home. Guess how that turns out? Co-writer/director Schwartz (who with Co-writer/co-producer Richard Holmes wrote and performed as the comedy act The Gruber Brothers fol- lowing their college graduation) seeks to create a kind of fantasy world, but aside from a few diverting moments, Shooting Fish is self-indulgent claptrap. It carries a PG rating, but I don't recommend it as a family entertain- ment, for kids are likely to be bored, and parents may not relish having to explain precisely why it is OK for the characters to cheat. * 1/2 5/22 1998 96