Help! I'm a Fish (Danish: Hjælp! Jeg er en fisk, also known as A Fish Tale in some regions) is a 2000 Danish animated science fantasy musical adventure film directed by Stefan Fjeldmark and Michael Hegner, with co-direction by Greg Manwaring.[1][2] The screenplay was written by Stefan Fjeldmark, Karsten Kiilerich, and John Stefan Olsen, based on an original story by Fjeldmark and Kiilerich, and the film was produced by Anders Mastrup, Russell Boland, and Eberhard Junkersdorf as a co-production between Denmark, Germany, and Ireland.[1][3] Released in Denmark on October 6, 2000, the film features voice performances in its original Danish version by actors including Nis Bank-Mikkelsen as the antagonist Joe, Søren Sætter-Lassen as Professor MacKrill, and child actors Sebastian Jessen, Pil Neja, and Morten Kern Nielsen as the protagonists Fly, Stella, and Chuck, respectively.[1] The English-dubbed version, released internationally in 2001, stars notable voices such as Alan Rickman as Joe the pilot fish, Terry Jones as the eccentric Professor MacKrill, and a young Aaron Paul as the character Chuck.[4]The story centers on three children—brother and sister Fly and Stella, along with their cousin Chuck—who visit their uncle, the scientist Professor MacKrill, and accidentally consume a potion intended to grant intelligence to sea life, transforming them into underwater creatures: Stella into a starfish, Fly into a flying fish, and Chuck into a jellyfish.[1] Stranded in the ocean, the children have only 48 hours to retrieve the antidote before their transformation becomes permanent, navigating dangers including a power-hungry pilot fish named Joe who steals the potion and begins organizing the sea creatures into an intelligent society.[1] The film incorporates musical numbers composed by Søren Hyldgaard, blending adventure, comedy, and mild peril suitable for family audiences, with animation handled across studios in Spain, England, and Thailand.[1][2]Upon release, Help! I'm a Fish received mixed reviews, praised for its vibrant animation and engaging score but critiqued for uneven pacing and song quality; it holds a 6.1/10 rating on IMDb from over 7,900 users and a 50% audience score on Rotten Tomatoes.[2][5] Commercially, the film underperformed at the box office but gained a cult following for its unique underwater world-building and voice talent.[2] It earned several nominations at the 2001 Robert Awards, Denmark's premier film honors, including for Best Danish Film, Best Director, and Best Screenplay, and was nominated for Outstanding Children or Youth Film at the 2002 German Film Awards.[6][7] Additionally, it won the Children's Jury Award at the 2000 Chicago International Children's Film Festival.[8]
Production
Development
The development of Help! I'm a Fish began in the late 1990s at A. Film A/S, Denmark's leading animation studio, which had been co-founded in 1988 by key figures including director Stefan Fjeldmark and producer Anders Mastrup.[9] The project represented a significant step for Danish animation.The film was directed by Stefan Fjeldmark, Michael Hegner, and Greg Manwaring, with Fjeldmark also contributing to the screenplay alongside writers Karsten Kiilerich and John Stefan Olsen.[1][10] The script emphasized a science fantasy narrative centered on children transformed into fish, incorporating musical elements to appeal to young audiences through songs and underwater adventures.[11]As an international co-production involving Denmark, Germany, Ireland, and Norway, the project was spearheaded by A. Film A/S in Copenhagen, with animation support from Munich Animation in Germany and Terraglyph Interactive Studios in Dublin.[1][10][12] The budget totaled 101.1 million DKK (approximately 13 million USD at the time), making it one of the most expensive Danish animated films to date and enabling the integration of advanced digital 3D effects alongside traditional animation.[9]
Animation
The production of Help! I'm a Fish involved an international collaboration across multiple studios to handle different aspects of the animation, including additional work in Spain, England, and Thailand. Primary contributions came from A. Film Production in Copenhagen, Denmark, Munich Animation in Germany, and Terraglyph Interactive Studios in Dublin, Ireland. This division of labor allowed for specialized expertise in each area, contributing to the film's pan-European funding and co-production model involving Denmark, Germany, Ireland, and Norway.[13][12]The animation style featured simple, cartoonish character designs that emphasized expressive faces and fluid movements, contrasting with more detailed and lush underwater environments to create a vibrant oceanic world. Backgrounds showcased intricate depictions of coral reefs and sea life, evoking a sense of depth and immersion typical of early 2000sEuropean animation. This approach balanced accessibility for young audiences with visual appeal, drawing on influences from classic Disney aesthetics while maintaining a distinct, less polished European flair.[12][14]The film employed traditional 2D hand-drawn animation as its core technique, supplemented by digital enhancements and CGI for complex sea effects, such as swirling water currents and large schools of fish. These digital elements were integrated to add realism to dynamic sequences, like the opening credits and the villain's sunken ship lair, without overshadowing the hand-drawn characters. 3D modeling was selectively used for inanimate or crowd-based aquatic elements, such as jellyfish swarms and the octopus scene, to achieve smoother motion and scale.[12][15]Depicting underwater physics presented significant challenges, particularly in simulating fluid dynamics for water movement and light refraction to convey depth and buoyancy. Animators addressed these by combining 2D layering with CGI particles for bubbles and currents, though large-scale fish groups required computational assistance to avoid unnatural rigidity. Color palettes were carefully adjusted to mimic submerged lighting, using cooler blues and greens with subtle gradients to differentiate surface and deep-sea environments, enhancing the magical yet realistic tone of the underwater realms.[15][12]
Narrative
Plot
Help! I'm a Fish follows the adventures of three young protagonists: inventive boy Fly, his younger sister Stella, and their cousin Chuck, a computer-savvy nerd. The story begins with the children embarking on a fishing trip after their plans are disrupted, leading them to the seaside laboratory of the eccentric Professor MacKrill. There, they encounter a potion designed to transform humans into fish as a solution to rising sea levels caused by global warming.[1][16]The inciting incident occurs when Stella accidentally drinks the potion, turning her into a starfish, prompting Fly to consume it as well and become a flying fish. Later, during a storm that sinks their boat, Chuck is forced to drink the potion to survive, transforming into a jellyfish. With only 48 hours before the changes become permanent, the trio must navigate the underwater world to locate an antidote, facing numerous dangers from the ocean's inhabitants.[12][2][16]Central to the conflict is the antagonistJoe, a cunning pilot fish who gains enhanced intelligence from the antidote and seeks to establish control over the sea creatures. As the children explore vibrant coral reefs and form alliances with helpful sea animals like a group of musicians, the narrative highlights themes of friendship through their mutual support and environmental awareness regarding climate change impacts on marine life. The story structure builds through episodic challenges that test their ingenuity and bonds, emphasizing exploration and cooperation in this fantastical aquatic realm.[12][16]
Cast
The English-language version of Help! I'm a Fish features a voice cast drawn from across the Anglosphere, reflecting its international co-production origins. The leads are voiced by American actors Jeff Pace as the inventive young Fly, Michelle Westerson as his curious sister Stella, and Aaron Paul as their adventurous cousin Chuck, marking one of Paul's earliest film roles before his breakthrough in television.[4][17]Supporting roles include British actor Alan Rickman as the scheming pilot fish antagonist Joe, delivering a distinctive villainous performance with his signature silky menace, and Monty Python member Terry Jones as the eccentric Professor MacKrill, infusing the mad scientist with whimsical humor.[4][17] Other notable voices encompass Teryl Rothery as the children's mother Lisa, Tom McCamus as their father, and David Bateson providing dual roles as the predatory shark and the irritable crab.[17][18]
The casting choices emphasize a blend of emerging and established talents, with voice direction by Canadian Michael Donovan ensuring cohesive performances across regional accents.[19] For international releases, the film underwent dubbing in languages such as Danish (original production), German, Spanish, and French, with variations in lead voices to suit local audiences while retaining core character dynamics.[20]
Music
Score
The score for Help! I'm a Fish was composed by Danish musician Søren Hyldgaard. Hyldgaard crafted an elaborate orchestral and choral backdrop that blends symphonic drama with whimsical, aquatic-inspired motifs, emphasizing the film's animated adventure tone through playful waltzes and comical underscores highlighted by excellent brass work.[21][22]Key musical themes underscore the protagonists' underwater journeys with light-hearted, exploratory motifs that evoke the fluidity and wonder of the ocean environment, while conflicts with the antagonist Joe—voiced by Alan Rickman—are accompanied by tense yet humorous cues, including a lazy-sneaky jazz theme tailored to the character's sly personality.[23][22] Character-specific motifs are woven throughout to maintain narrative cohesion, with the score deliberately structured around the film's songs for seamless integration.[23]The recording process involved the Irish Film Symphony Orchestra in Dublin, conducted by William Motzing, to capture the full orchestral depth while synchronizing cues precisely with the animation's timing and movements. This approach ensured the music's rhythmic alignment with visual elements, such as character actions and scene transitions, enhancing the overall immersive quality of the underwater sequences.[24]
Soundtrack
The soundtrack for Help! I'm a Fish features upbeat pop and dance tracks with electronic elements, crafted to engage young viewers through catchy melodies and themes of adventure and magic.[26] These songs serve as diegetic elements, woven into pivotal narrative moments such as the children's transformation into fish via a magical potion and their perilous underwater journeys, heightening the film's whimsical tone.[27]Prominent tracks include the title song "Help! I'm a Fish (Little Yellow Fish)" by the Danish girl group Little Trees, which underscores the initial transformation sequence with its playful, repetitive chorus evoking the characters' sudden aquatic plight.[28] Loona's "Do U Believe In Magic," a cover of the Lovin' Spoonful classic infused with Eurodance beats, accompanies scenes of wonder and exploration in the ocean depths.[29] Lou Bega delivers "People Lovin' Me," a funky pop number that energizes group interactions during the protagonists' escapades, while Meja's "Ocean Of Emotion" provides an emotive, synth-driven backdrop to reflective underwater encounters.[26]The official soundtrack album, titled Help! I'm a Fish (Music from the Original Soundtrack), was released on July 28, 2001, by BMG in Europe, compiling the film's vocal songs alongside brief interludes and extended mixes.[27] Running approximately 43 minutes, it emphasizes the pop-oriented selections without the film's non-vocal instrumental score. The tracklist highlights contributions from international artists, blending teen pop and dance styles:
The album received limited commercial attention, primarily appealing to fans of early 2000s Euro-pop soundtracks, though specific chart performance details are scarce.[26]
Release
Theatrical
The film premiered in Denmark on October 6, 2000, under the distribution of Nordisk Film Biografdistribution.[1]Following its Danish debut, the movie rolled out to additional markets, including a release in Germany on April 12, 2001, and in Ireland on August 24, 2001, as part of its broader international strategy handled by PID Producers International Distribution for sales.[30][1]In the United States, the film had a limited theatrical release on June 29, 2001.[30]Prior to wider theatrical release, the film screened at the Chicago International Children’s Film Festival in 2000, earning the Children's Jury Prize in the Feature Film or Video - Animation category.[31]Marketing efforts emphasized the film's appeal as a family-oriented animated musical, with promotional trailers highlighting the central theme of human-to-fish transformation to attract young audiences.[32]
Home media
The film was released on VHS and DVD in select European markets, including Germany on January 6, 2003, distributed by Movie Star Home Entertainment. In the United Kingdom, it was released on VHS on November 19, 2001, by Metrodome Distribution.In the United States, it received a DVD release under the title A Fish Tale on September 5, 2006, by Genius Entertainment, featuring an anamorphic widescreen presentation and Dolby Digital audio.[33][34]No official Blu-ray edition has been issued as of November 2025.As of November 2025, the film is available for digital rental or purchase on Amazon Prime Video in the United States, with no free streaming options on major platforms like Netflix.[35][36]Special features on the DVD editions include behind-the-scenes featurettes, such as a "Making of" documentary, music videos for songs like "Help! I'm a Fish" by Creamy, theatrical trailers, and cast/crew interviews.[37][38]Internationally, home media releases feature dubs in languages including German (Hilfe! Ich bin ein Fisch!), French (Gloups! Je suis un poisson), and Spanish (¡Socorro, soy un pez!), along with English subtitles where applicable.[39]
Reception
Box office
Help! I'm a Fish earned a total of $5,595,327 at the worldwide box office against a production budget of $18 million, qualifying it as a box office flop.[2][40]In Denmark, the film saw moderate success upon its October 2000 release, grossing DKK 8,101,536 ($915,945) in its first two weeks across 60 screens with 177,243 admissions, outperforming competitors like Dancer in the Dark and experiencing a 240% increase from week one to week two during school holidays.[41] The film ultimately grossed approximately 36 million DKK (about $5 million USD) in Denmark, becoming one of the top-grossing domestic titles in Denmark for the year.[42][43]Internationally, the film underperformed in key markets. In the United States, released as A Fish Tale on March 2, 2003, it grossed $563,911 domestically.[2] The United Kingdom generated $468,137.[44] In Germany, it ranked #7 in the top ten after three weeks of release in spring 2001.[42] In France, among children's films over Easter 2001, it placed second to Disney's The Emperor's New Groove.[42]The film's theatrical run was limited outside Europe, contributing to its modest global earnings; it later recouped additional revenue through home media sales, though specific figures remain unavailable.[45]
Critical response
Upon its release, Help! I'm a Fish garnered mixed reviews from critics, who appreciated its charm for younger audiences but noted inconsistencies in execution. On Rotten Tomatoes, it holds an audience score of 50% based on over 5,000 ratings (as of November 2025).[5]Common Sense Media rated it 3 out of 5 stars, praising it as an "entertaining, nicely animated sea adventure" featuring kid heroes, engaging music, and charming underwater settings, though it includes mild scares suitable for ages 6 and up.[16] The film has a 6.1 out of 10 rating on IMDb from over 7,900 user ratings (as of November 2025).Positive feedback highlighted the voice acting, particularly Alan Rickman's "superbly wicked" performance as the power-hungry shark Joe, which added menace and humor to the antagonist.[46] Reviewers commended the animation's impressionistic underwater sequences and original designs, such as submerged ocean liners and the mad scientist's lab, alongside catchy musical numbers that enhanced the adventure.[47] The film's child-friendly humor and its environmental themes—centered on global warming, rising seas, and the need to protect marine life—were lauded for providing subtle educational value amid the excitement.[16]Critics, however, pointed to uneven pacing and a simplistic plot that occasionally lost momentum, especially during sequences without the central villain.[46] The animation was critiqued for transitioning from stylish openings to a more standard cartoon aesthetic, with human characters rendered less imaginatively than the marine life.[47] In post-release comparisons, the film was frequently juxtaposed with Pixar's Finding Nemo (2003), often seen as a less polished precursor sharing underwater adventure tropes, though it predated the blockbuster by three years.[12]Audience reception emphasized its family-friendly appeal, with viewers enjoying the quirky characters and lighthearted tone for repeated watches.[16] By the 2020s, retrospectives have recognized it as an underrated gem, praising its story, characters, and beautiful underwater animation, as in a July 2025 Collider ranking of forgotten animated movies.[48]
Accolades
Awards
At the 2000 Chicago International Children's Film Festival, Help! I'm a Fish won the Children's Jury Prize in the Feature Film or Video – Animation category, with directors Stefan Fjeldmark and Michael Hegner receiving the award for their work on the Danish production.[8] This honor highlighted the film's appeal to young audiences through its imaginative animation and family-oriented story.[49]
Nominations
The filmHelp! I'm a Fish garnered several nominations at the 2001 Robert Awards, Denmark's premier film honors presented by the Danish Film Academy, reflecting its recognition as a significant animated co-production involving Denmark, Germany, and Ireland. It was nominated in the Best Danish Film category (to producer Anders Mastrup), Best Director for directors Stefan Fjeldmark and Michael Hegner, Best Screenplay for writers Stefan Fjeldmark and Karsten Kiilerich, Best Original Score for composer Søren Hyldgaard, and Best Sound for Stig Sparre-Ulrich and Friedrich M. Dosch.[7][6]Additionally, the film received a nomination at the 2002 German Film Awards (Deutscher Filmpreis) for Outstanding Children or Youth Film, underscoring its appeal in international children's media circles during the 2000–2001 period.[7][50]
Legacy
Cultural impact
The film contributed to the early 2000s surge in European animated family musicals, using traditional animation techniques in a pan-European co-production involving Denmark, Germany, and Ireland, which helped showcase the region's growing capabilities in feature-length animation ahead of Hollywood's dominance with underwater adventures like Finding Nemo in 2003. Released in Scandinavian territories in late 2000, it achieved strong box office performance in its home markets and France, topping Danish charts with its soundtrack and demonstrating the viability of international animated features from smaller studios like A. Film.[51][47]Over time, Help! I'm a Fish has cultivated a cult following among animation enthusiasts for its quirky humor, memorable original songs like "I'm a Little Yellow Fish," and the surreal transformation sequences that turn human children into sea creatures, elements that have resonated in niche online discussions of early 2000s animation tropes. Its distinctive underwater world, with expressive colors and impressionistic visuals, has been praised in retrospectives as a hidden gem that shakes up conventional kids' adventure narratives while delivering good morals about friendship and environmental awareness.[52]The film's themes of ocean pollution and the balance of marine ecosystems have led to educational tie-ins, including screenings at environmental film festivals that highlight conservation efforts to protect ocean habitats and reduce overfishing pressures. In modern viewings, particularly around its 25th anniversary in 2025, retrospectives have spotlighted Aaron Paul's early voice role as the character Chuck, marking one of his first major credits before his breakthrough in live-action television. This renewed interest, including fan tributes and artwork shared online, has coincided with ongoing appreciation for the film's unique charm.[53][52]
Adaptations
Following the success of the 2000 animated film in Denmark, Egmont Imagination and A. Film announced plans in 2001 to develop an animated TV series adaptation, aiming to expand on the underwater adventure themes with new stories featuring the child protagonists.[54] The project was positioned as a follow-up to capitalize on the film's domestic popularity, which had grossed over $5.6 million in Denmark alone.[55] However, the series never advanced beyond the development stage and was not produced.[42]No feature film sequels have been made, though minor tie-in media emerged shortly after the film's release. A PC adventure game titled Hilfe! Ich bin ein Fisch, loosely based on the movie's plot, was published by Egmont Interactive in 2001 for European markets, allowing players to control the fish-transformed characters in underwater challenges.[56] Limited merchandise lines, such as character plush toys depicting Fly, Chuck, Stella, and supporting figures like Sasha the seahorse, were released primarily in Germany and Japan to promote the film.[57]The lack of further adaptations has been attributed to the film's modest international box office results outside its home market, against production costs estimated at $18 million that strained distribution efforts, alongside shifts in studio focus at A. Film toward other projects like Terkel in Trouble.[45] As of November 2025, no confirmed rumors or official announcements for reboots, sequels, or revived series plans have surfaced.[54]