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Salmon Fishing in the Yemen 2012 123movies

Salmon Fishing in the Yemen 2012 123movies

Make the Improbable PossibleMar. 09, 2012107 Min.
Your rating: 0
7 1 vote

Synopsis

Watch: Salmon Fishing in the Yemen 2011 123movies, Full Movie Online – Visionary Sheikh Muhammed bin Zaida bani Tihama (Amr Waked) believes his passion for the peaceful pastime of salmon fishing can enrich the lives of his people, and he dreams of bringing the sport to the not so fish-friendly desert. Willing to spare no expense, he instructs his representative to turn the dream into reality, an extraordinary feat that will require the involvement of Britain’s leading fisheries expert, Dr. Alfred “Fred” Jones (Ewan McGregor), who happens to think the project both absurd and unachievable. That is, until the Prime Minister’s overzealous press secretary, Patricia Maxwell (Dame Kristin Scott Thomas) latches on to it as a “good will” story. Now, this unlikely team will put it all on the line and embark on an upstream journey of faith and fish to prove the impossible, possible..
Plot: A fisheries expert is approached by a consultant to help realize a sheik’s vision of bringing the sport of fly-fishing to the desert and embarks on an upstream journey of faith and fish to prove the impossible possible.
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Ratings:

6.8/10 Votes: 65,219
67% | RottenTomatoes
58/100 | MetaCritic
N/A Votes: 767 Popularity: 7.638 | TMDB

Reviews:

A very entertaining movie that will appeal to everyone, not just fisherman. I recommend this. I say B+
“You can’t catch faith with a fishing rod.” After Harriet (Blunt) contacts Dr. Alfred Jones (McGregor) about a Shiek from Yemen who wants to bring the sport of salmon fishing to his country he laughs it off. After being given no choice in the matter Jones begins to do just enough to keep his job. After meeting the Shiek and helping Harriet through a crisis his outlook begins to change. He puts everything he has into making the dream possible. The sign of a good movie is one that keeps you interested and makes you like it when you aren’t even in the mood to watch it. I wanted to watch this based off the preview, but at the time I sat down to see it I really wasn’t in the mood for a movie like this. It did start off a little slow but quickly sucked me in and by the end I was so into it that I couldn’t remember why I didn’t want to watch it. I have fished many times but I’m not what you would call an avid fisherman. The reason I say that is because this movie has the perfect balance of enough fishing to keep fisherman entertained, but not enough to make it all about fishing, much like the way “A River Runs Through It” did. The last twenty minutes of the movie makes you feel a proverbial “rollar-coaster” of emotions. Every few minutes something happens that changes how you feel while not turning into the cheesy and sappy ending that it could have been. Overall, a good movie that people who fish and those who don’t will both enjoy. I liked it. I give it a B+.
Review By: cosmo_tiger
A gentle movie about faiths of different stripes
A British fisheries expert is presented with a offer from a Yemenese sheikh to bring the sport of fly fishing to the Sahara in this charming, likable drama from Lasse Hallstrom. It features beautiful cinematography, even for those who don’t particularly care about such things, and winning performances by Ewan McGregor and Emily Blunt. Salmon Fishing in the Yemen, at its heart, is not a movie about fish at all; it is about different kinds of faith and the degree to which people place their trust in them. Alfred Jones (McGregor) is an expert in all things ichthyic and works for the UK’s version of the Department of the Interior. He is approached by the representative of a idealistic sheikh who loves to fish. The sheikh has it in his head that bringing the art of fly fishing for salmon to the Yemen River would be beneficial to his people (the river is dried up in places and is, obviously, in the middle of a desert). It is not a popular idea, and Jones, before and after taking a perfunctory meeting with Harriet, dismisses it as ludicrous, unsound, and downright absurd. (Dr. Jones is a bit of a straight arrow, you see.) And it would seem that would be the end of it, except that the Prime Minister’s press secretary (Kristin Scott Thomas) sees this as an opportunity to foster Arab-Anglo relations at a time when, well, they’re not so good. Long story short – Jones has to make the project work.

There are many obstacles to overcome. The water must be the right temperature and with the right amount of oxygen. Fish have to be found, somewhere, and imported. Negotiations must be had with local tribes who feel that bringing water to the desert is an abomination of some sort. And meanwhile, pressure mounts and mounts for Jones to pull it all off, since the sheikh is paying handsomely to the British government.

Alfred – Fred – and Harriet each have home lives that are in their own unique turmoil. Fred has been married for several years with no children, and it’s clear that the love he and his wife once shared in full has dwindled considerably; she suddenly takes a job in Geneva, promising to visit him every so often. As for Harriet, the first man she has fallen for is suddenly deployed to Afghanistan. Each takes solace in their Yemen project.

What works best in this movie is the chemistry between Blunt and McGregor; the former plays an optimist ready for new challenges, and the latter is more of a stick-in-the-mud with little sense of humor. Okay, you who are reading this know that this is a plain setup, as this is not just a drama: it a romantic drama. Luckily for all of us, the movie doesn’t descend into double entendres, sideward glances, awkward silences, and the like. Blunt and McGregor manage to avoid making the romance too light, too believable; we shouldn’t be able to easily guess precisely how things will wind up, and we can’t. Theirs is a working relationship that neither acknowledges as being anything but, and each is torn between their subconscious feelings for each other and for their respective significant others.

At one point, the sheikh asks Jones if he is a man of faith, and the expert replies that he is not. The sheikh rightly points out, however, that fishing itself relies on faith – the hope that something will occur, however improbable. A man puts a lure into the water. The outcome is not predetermined; he will most likely reel it in untouched. But he has faith that a fish will nibble at it and take the bait. The sheikh feels the same way about his fishing project. He has faith that doing so will enable the poor communities surrounding the river to thrive.

In the end, this is a quiet, elegant movie about love and hope, both of fishing and humanity. Excellent performances by the leads and able direction by Hallstrom make this a sort of soft-edged drama with romance and a bit of action.

Review By: dfranzen70

Other Information:

Original Title Salmon Fishing in the Yemen
Release Date 2012-03-09
Release Year 2011

Original Language en
Runtime 1 hr 47 min (107 min)
Budget 0
Revenue 34564651
Status Released
Rated PG-13
Genre Comedy, Drama, Romance
Director Lasse Hallström
Writer Simon Beaufoy, Paul Torday
Actors Ewan McGregor, Emily Blunt, Amr Waked
Country United Kingdom
Awards 6 nominations
Production Company N/A
Website N/A


Technical Information:

Sound Mix Dolby Digital, Datasat, SDDS
Aspect Ratio 2.35 : 1
Camera Arricam LT, Hawk V-Lite and V-Plus Lenses, Arricam ST, Hawk V-Lite and V-Plus Lenses
Laboratory Technicolor, London, UK (dailies)
Film Length 2,926 m (Portugal)
Negative Format 35 mm (Kodak Vision2 50D 5201, Vision3 250D 5207, Vision3 500T 5219)
Cinematographic Process Digital Intermediate (2K) (master format), Hawk Scope (anamorphic) (source format)
Printed Film Format 35 mm (Fuji Eterna-CP 3514DI), D-Cinema

Salmon Fishing in the Yemen 2012 123movies
Salmon Fishing in the Yemen 2012 123movies
Salmon Fishing in the Yemen 2012 123movies
Original title Salmon Fishing in the Yemen
TMDb Rating 6.4 767 votes

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