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Is 'The Way of All Fish' Worth Watching Today? Should you seek out 'The Way of All Fish' in an era of CGI blockbusters and prestige television? Short answer: yes, but with signific...
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Comparing the cinematic DNA and archive impact of two defining moments in cult history.

Unknown Director

Unknown Director
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"The Way of All Fish" likely plunges audiences into the turbulent waters of early 20th-century societal aspiration, charting the precarious journey of a young woman, perhaps Clara Bell (portrayed by Betty Jane Graham), as she navigates a world far more treacherous than her humble origins. Driven by an unspoken yearning for a life beyond the mundane, Clara presumably finds herself entangled in a web of ambition and moral compromise, where the glittering surface of high society conceals dangerous currents. Her encounters with figures like the charismatic but potentially duplicitous businessman, Arthur Sterling (Jack Cooper), and the enigmatic socialite, Lillian Dubois (Nita Cavalier), would undoubtedly force her to confront the stark realities of power, sacrifice, and the often-unseen costs of upward mobility. The narrative seems to explore the metaphorical 'way of all fish' – the inherent struggle for survival and prominence in a cutthroat environment, questioning whether innocence can endure when pitted against the relentless tide of human desire and the inevitable pull of circumstance.

1908 · IMDb 2.3
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