Popcorn and Inspiration: ‘Salmon Fishing in the Yemen’: The Power of Faith
A wealthy sheik falls in love with cold-water fly-fishing on his Scottish estate and decides to construct a fly-fishing river in his homeland — the middle of the Yemen Desert.
When “Salmon Fishing in the Yemen” hit theaters in 2011, a New York subway poster advertising the lottery showed a Boeing 747 with the words “Kevin’s Airline” stenciled on its side. And a huge photo of Kevin’s face on the rear stabilizer fin. The caption read: “That kind of rich.”
In this delightful comedy-drama-romance, a wealthy sheik, upon falling in love with cold-water fly-fishing on his Scottish estate, decides that he'll just construct himself a convenient fly-fishing river smack-dab in the middle of a Yemen desert—his homeland. What would you call that?
“That kind of rich” could have been the alternative title for “Salmon Fishing in the Yemen.” However, it’s not about the squandering of wealth that it first appears to be. It’s about the project as a concrete manifestation of the sheik’s deep and poetic understanding of faith.
If You Build It They Will Come
When the British military inadvertently blows up a mosque in Afghanistan, the prime minister’s top spin doctor, Patricia Maxwell (Kristin Scott Thomas), immediately orders her team to dig up “a good news story from the Middle East.” Said story is to be exploited into a warm, fuzzy diversion of public attention away from said mosque fiasco.
The sheik’s intention to reconstruct his beloved salmon-fishing milieu in the Yemen desert is quickly sniffed out. He claims that, more than anything else, it’s an offering of healing, peace, and spiritual uplifting for his troubled people. Warm and fuzzy perfection!
Exceedingly uptight scientist Dr. Fred Jones (Ewan McGregor, never better) is a fisheries expert. Spin-doc Patricia saddles him with overseeing the salmon-fishing project, to which he is at first vehemently opposed due to its staggering, on-the-page, logistical and scientific impossibility.
Aided in his initial foot-dragging efforts by the sheik’s comely representative Harriet (Emily Blunt), Fred soon finds himself eventually swayed by the sheik’s infectious charm, warming to the plan and, of course, also eventually warming to Harriet.
The sheik, charismatically played by Amr Waked (whom producer Paul Webster considers “the George Clooney of the Middle East,” according to the press notes), is a man of moral stature, a philosopher, and a keen observer of life. He ruminates, “Fishermen only care about patience, tolerance, and humility.” (Renowned fly-fishing author John Gierach would definitely have something hilarious to say about that.) But the sheik hopes that the Yemen locals will possibly benefit from such a mindset, since we see them forever patrolling about, brandishing AK-47s, and yelling a lot.
The Power of Faith
The acting in the film is all-around stellar. It’s a cast of stars who excel at comedy as well as drama, and Amr Waked is a revelation.
Lasse Hallstrom, who’s helmed such films as “What’s Eating Gilbert Grape,” masterfully steers the subtle and very funny rhythms of European humor. He also engineers very moving dramatic scenes between the male and female leads, capitalizing on their powerful chemistry.
Hallstrom also underscores the film’s theme of the power of faith with various interchanges between no-faith Fred and the faithful sheik. Remember, this Fred we’re talking about is a secular guy, an atheist. He needs to take baby steps toward faith, and the sheik helps him do that. For example, Dr. Fred also loves fly-fishing, and the sheik points out, hilariously, that Fred’s fishing fun (standing in a stream for hours, waving a stick, with no guarantees) is not too terribly distant from ... ahem ... faith?
Furthermore, there’s the example of the dilemma of stocking the salmon run with farmed fish, which most likely lack their original wild instinct to head upstream to spawn. Fred’s hunch that it’s still deeply in their nature to “run” is pointed out again as being closely related to faith.
Finally, the entire apparently cockamamie project is one huge act of faith—what else could it be? There are always setbacks, but one must demonstrate faith by persistence. At one point, the sheik wonders aloud, after a setback perpetrated by angry countrymen who don’t yet understand his vision, whether his project glorifies God or man.
We already know. We’ve seen the warmth of his hospitality, the depth of his philanthropy, the extent of his faith, and know his grand gesture to have enriched our lives. We know it by the laughter, tears, and the renewed faith in humanity’s goodness that we feel.
‘Salmon Fishing in the Yemen’
Director: Lasse Hallstrom
Cast: Ewan McGregor, Emily Blunt, Kristin Scott Thomas, Amr Waked, Catherine Steadman, Tom Mison, Rachael Stirling, Tom Beard
Running Time: 1 hour, 47 minutes
Rating: PG-13
Release Date: April 20, 2012 (UK)
Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
Mark Jackson
Film Critic
Mark Jackson is the chief film critic for The Epoch Times. In addition to the world’s number-one storytelling vehicle—film, he enjoys martial arts, weightlifting, motorcycles, vision questing, rock-climbing, qigong, oil painting, and human rights activism. Jackson earned a bachelor's degree in philosophy from Williams College, followed by a classical theater training, and has 20 years’ experience as a New York professional actor, working in theater, commercials, and television daytime dramas. He narrated The Epoch Times audiobook “How the Specter of Communism is Ruling Our World,” which is available on iTunes and Audible. Jackson is a Rotten Tomatoes-approved film critic.