A diamond advocate is attempting to steal a collection of diamonds, yet troubles arise when he realizes that he is not the only one after the diamonds.
----------------------------------------
Cpartak from United States
----------------------------------------
Before I review this film, I want to mention that I've seen it about ten times and have yet to stop laughing at any of the jokes. This is one of the best written and acted comedies that I've ever seen. The plot is airtight, and the jokes are perfectly timed and delivered. This is due in large part to the spectacular cast of the film. Jamie Lee Curtis, Johh Cleese, Michael Palin, and my personal favorite Kevin Kline as Otto the moronic ex-CIA agent who's too stupid to realize that he's stupid. The film centers around the four aforementioned actors who are involved in a bank robbery, and the conniving and backstabbing by each that takes place afterwards. A large portion of the comedic material in this film comes from the mixture, or more precisely clash, of British and American cultures. Kevin Kline's portrayal of Otto the red-blooded American with entirely too much ego and confidence is contrasted perfectly by John Cleese's reserved and in Otto's words "sexually repressed" English gentleman who is too scared to go out and live his life. Jamie Lee Curtis is also great as the title character who is determined to back-stab and cross anyone and everyone in order to get what she wants. Finally, there's Michael Palin as Ken the hit-man/animal lover/severe stutterer who must kill a key witness in order to protect his boss. If there are any funnier scenes than the ones where Ken must kill this witness, I haven't seen them. Palin is absolutely brilliant, easily one of the best comedic performances ever. The film is close to 2 hours long, but the plot is so clever and well structured that it's over before you know it. To me, that is one of the trademarks of a great film. You don't want this movie to end, and you're disappointed when it does. Do yourself a favor and watch A Fish Called Wanda and you will wonder why you haven't seen (or in many cases even heard of) this film before.
----------------------------------------
DanB-4 from Canada
----------------------------------------
This is the only film I ever paid to see two days in a row. I missed too much of it the first time because of my own hysterical snorting laughter.
This is a work of comic genius. And, like any good film, the screenplay is at the heart of the belly laughs. Every character is given a detailed personality quirk or two, and then it is shamefully exploited for laugh after laugh. Note for example, John Cleese's speech to Jamie Lee Curtis about how awful it is to be British - the eternal fear of embarrassment. Moments later, he is caught buck naked in a marital tryst in some else's flat by the people to used to live in his own home. Also, the funny-offensive envelope is pushed to the limit when K-K-K-Ken (Michael Palin), the passionate animal lover inadvertently kills three innocent dogs in his attempt to murder an old woman who would otherwise be a prosecution witness. Now that's funny!
Cleese's character, Archie Leach (Carey Grant's real name) is a likable buffoon of a lawyer, happy in his banal existence until he meets the sexy American, Wanda (Jamie Lee). I cannot even being to describe the plot beyond that point without doing it a grave disservice. It twists and dangles about in a world of double-cross and goldfish-eating for no other reason than to set up a joke.
You cannot speak of this film without mention of Kevin Kline as Otto, a role that won him a richly-deserved Oscar. Otto is the ex-CIA "weapons man" who makes it his business to read philosophy but would be more at home with Curious George. An obsessive, self-indulgent, painfully stupid, violent, deceitful, gullible egomaniac, the character of Otto is amongst the best comedic performances ever delivered.
The film's funniest scene takes place at Leach's (Cleese) house. In a scene that rivals anything that has ever hit the screen for laughs, the film and its scripts looks deep enough into itself to even give Cleese's dry-as-toast wife a laugh or two. Then, later on, this scene proves to be the set up for even more jokes. A Fish Called Wanda is pure comedy and every scene either provides a laugh or sets one up - it graciously does not waste our time trying to be moral or turning into a formula car-chase flick.
My comments are choppy but so is this movie. If you see it and don't laugh, check your pulse. We have only been given a handful of good comedies in the last decade. A Fish Called Wanda is a treasure. **** out of ****.
NOTE: TBS and some other TV networks show this film with the "offensive language" edited out. It kills the movie - if you can't hack the language, pass this one over.
----------------------------------------
Coventry from the Draconian Swamp of Unholy Souls
----------------------------------------
Brief and simple: this movie is terrific entertainment! With its uniquely eccentric characters and delightfully absurd storyline, 'A Fish Called Wanda" unquestionably is one of the funniest films ever made. The exhilarating screenplay works on so many level (a diamond heist gone wrong, Brits vs. Americans, romantic comedy...) and the top-notch cast obviously had an excellent time doing this film-job. There's not a dull moment throughout the entire movie and every sequence contains at least two or three hilarious moments. The humor is very over-the-top at times but, what the hell, it remains a joy to behold. The cast is nearly perfect with John Cleese, Michael Palin and Jamie Lee Curtis at their absolute best. Still, there's one actor who deserves extra praise for his role here and that's Kevin Kline. His hyperactive, deranged and extravagant character Otto is one of the most brilliant roles in comedy cinema ever! His moves, grimaces and monologues will make you fall off your seat laughing. Kline won an Oscar for his role and, everybody who has seen "A Fish Called Wanda" will agree on the fact that this was a well-deserved price.
----------------------------------------
Peach-2 from Netherlands
----------------------------------------
This is one of the funniest films I have ever seen. The film is so well put together that time flew on by and I was sitting there wanting more. This movie is perfectly cast and well directed. There is no real style to the direction, but when you have a script like this all you need to do is point the camera and let it rip. I would like to point out that if you haven't seen this movie yet, check it out for Kevin Kline's performance alone. It is one of the best comedic performances you will ever witness. Great movie.
----------------------------------------
The_Void from Beverley Hills, England
----------------------------------------
To make a comedy that can be lauded with the comment 'absolutely hilarious' isn't an easy thing to do. It's not so difficult, however, when you are one of the funniest men on god's green earth; and the extremely talented John Cleese has certainly managed to write a fine piece of comedy here. Teaming up with Monty Python buddy Michael Palin and Ealing studios director Charles Crichton, these talented comedians have managed to create a film that is most certainly one of the funniest; laugh per minute and lasting hilarity when it's over, movies ever made. The plot is taken straight from the classic Ealing comedy era (no wonder it works so well) and it follows four crooks that have stolen a bunch of jewels and now decide to double cross one another to take the loot solely for themselves. The plot thickens when the female of the bunch decides that the best way to get the loot would be to get close to a grassed-up co-conspirator's barrister; John Cleese.
Aside from an inch-perfect screenplay, A Fish Called Wanda also benefits from a fine cast of actors to deliver it. John Cleese steals every scene he's in, as you might expect, and he more than justifies his reputation as one of, maybe even the, finest British comedy actor ever. He is joined by a talented pair of Americans; Kevin Kline and Jamie Lee Curtis, along with, as mentioned, his fellow Python Michael Palin. Kline is certainly one of the most underrated actors working today, and his comic timing in this movie is right on the money. Makes you wonder how much better he could have been used over the years. "Scream Queen" Jamie Lee Curtis also does well in the title role; and Michael Palin obviously knows his way round a comedy script. The jokes in the film come thick and fast, and I can't think of a single one that didn't work. It's the big gags that are the real stand out of the movie, though, and one in particular that sees Kevin Kline trying to explain to Cleese's wife what he's doing in their home is absolutely priceless. I nearly fell of my chair laughing. This film is a must see.
----------------------------------------
Lee Eisenberg (lee.eisenberg.pdx@gmail.com) from Portland, Oregon, USA
----------------------------------------
Portraying a heist gone awry, "A Fish Called Wanda" goes all out in every way possible. Maybe the whole thing is little more than an excuse for a bunch of silly situations, but they have some great ones here. Whether it's John Cleese's dance, Kevin Kline's rips at England, Michael Palin's stuttering, or Jamie Lee Curtis's deadpan performance, they know how to do everything here. I can't describe how funny the movie is; you just have to see it. And you may very well die laughing - or if nothing else, you'll want to take a trip to England. Kevin Kline definitely deserved his Oscar. And of course, the cast teamed up again for the equally funny (maybe even better) "Fierce Creatures". This is a comedy classic in every way.
Oh, and in case Kevin Kline is reading this: Happy birthday! You're my favorite actor!
----------------------------------------
Shaolin_Apu from Seinäjoki, Finland
----------------------------------------
'The Fish Called Wanda' and 'Some Like It Hot' are the two best comedies that I have ever seen. They're both very unique films and represent one complete story and manage at same to be devastatingly funny films. They don't need sequels because they are both 'perfect' in their own right. I have seen these films so many times but they always surprise me again and again when I find out how good they are.
'The Fish Called Wanda' is not only well made but also happens to be funny. I call this movie 'the best', which may sound ironical, because Cleese and Palin have even been more funny as Pythons. Also ironical is that Jamie Lee Curtis says only one joke (Aristotle was not...) in the whole film. Kevin Kline is hysterically funny without one-liners and slap-sticks. It is the overall situation that makes the film complete. This is to say, that the film is not at all stuck up with gags but has absolutely right timing for every event. This feature makes the film even better than anything what Monty Python and the Marx Brothers have done. Or at least reaches the same level with them. This film proves that a movie can kill you in laughter using only everyday realism.
A Masterpiece from John Cleese, who proves here that he can be funny even without Pythonity. He actually did the same with 'Fawlty Towers', but as a single film is this the very best. It just works.
----------------------------------------
T-Mac (maxta80@hotmail.com) from Sydney, Australia
----------------------------------------
When four people team up for armed robbery then all try to keep the whole lot for themselves, hilarity follows. The humor in this film is clever and constant, never letting up for a minute. Watch especially for Kevin Kline's performance of Otto, it's one you'll remember for years to come. His attitude and his character suit him so well. His contrast with John Cleese's Archie Leach is phenomenal. A must see for all. Brilliant film.
----------------------------------------
funkyfry from Oakland CA
----------------------------------------
This is one of the best, if not THE best, caper comedies of the modern era. The writing is very witty and at the same time sometimes turgid. The cast is absolutely perfect; Cleese makes a great subdued lawyer who wants to be a bad boy, Curtis is wonderful and just keeps you guessing (as perhaps her own character is guessing, as to what it is SHE wants), and Kline is perfectly annoying as the Nietzsche-quoting American. This movie has strong shades of "The Big Sleep" and other Howard Hawks comedies, even going so far as to name Cleese's character "Leach" in honor of Cary Grant.
This film should appeal to those with no classic movie knowledge, but for those who have seen "To Catch a Thief" and other caper classics, this is even more of a treat. Romantic, funny, and slick.
Also big ups to Michael Palin for another memorable supporting performance.
----------------------------------------
Dale Barnard from Western Australia
----------------------------------------
A Fish Called Wanda is my favourite movie of all time and always will be. John Cleese has written this masterpiece very cleverly, his best best writing piece since Fawlty Towers. Kevin Kline, who won an Oscar for his role in the film, is excellent as the looppy, arm pit sniffing Otto, and is my favourite in the film. Michael Palin is also brilliant as the stuttering Ken. John Cleese, in a role rather different to Basil Fawlty and his Monty Python characters, plays the lawyer Archie Leach fantastically. But the movie is all around Jamie Lee Curtis' Wanda, who is an American thief, after diamonds that she, Otto, Ken and George (Tom Georgeson) stole. In order to get the diamonds, Wanda has a fling with just about everybody. The movie will leave you in suspense wondering who will get the diamonds. Along the way, there are plenty of funny lines and gags, especially from Kline. A top movie. Watch A Fish Called Wanda, don't skip it. A++++
In 1989, when this film was shown in the theaters in Denmark, a Danish man named Ole Bentzen, a Danish audiologist, literally laughed himself to death during the scene where Ken gets the chips up his nose. Bentzen's heart rate went between 250-500 beats per minute and he eventually succumbed to cardiac arrest. The story behind this is that the man had made a joke a few years earlier with his family during dinner, where he put a piece of cauliflower up his and every family members nose as a joke and made a bet with them on who could eat up their carrots without the cauliflower falling out. When the scene with Ken and the chips came up, he started thinking about this dinner-incident and laughed so hard that his heart stopped. This story is well known in Scandinavia and spread around as almost an "urban legend" shortly after it happened. It was confirmed by his son, who also told the dinner-story as an explanation to why his father laughed so hard during the chips-scene that he died.
------------------------
Jamie Lee Curtis buried her face in pillows during Kevin Kline's ejaculation scene, to keep her from bursting out laughing at the faces he was making.
------------------------
Michael Palin went on to found the London Centre for Stammering Children after a group of stutterers confronted him regarding the sensitivity with which he dealt with Ken's handicap in this film.
------------------------
John Cleese's favourite film of his own.
------------------------
Michael Palin's father stuttered, so Michael used a lot his real life experience when playing Ken, including the fact that Ken's stutter is less pronounced around people he trusts (Tom and Wanda) and worse around people he is uncomfortable with (Otto).
------------------------
Leach's daughter Portia is played by John Cleese's real-life daughter Cynthia Cleese, credited as Cynthia Caylor.
------------------------
In the robbery scene, it really was Kevin Kline who shot the crossbow at the sensor. Kevin got the shot off correctly on the second take.
------------------------
Kevin Kline begged John Cleese to let Otto speak French instead of Italian when he wants to seduce Jamie Lee Curtis, since Kline speaks French. Cleese insisted that it had to be Italian. Kline started singing "Volare" because he ran out of Italian cheeses and other Italian phrases that he could ad lib, and was concerned that the director did not yell cut, since the producers did not own the rights to "Volare" when the scene was being filmed.
------------------------
John Cleese's character is called Archie Leach, which is Cary Grant's real name.
------------------------
Jamie Lee Curtis was listed as "Jamie Lee Schwartz" on all the call sheets, because John Cleese found it amusing that her father Tony Curtis's real name was Bernard Schwartz.
------------------------
When Otto leaves Archie's home, he says to Archie's wife Wendy that they would all speak German without the USA. He leaves the house while singing the first verse of the anthem: "Deutschland über alles". The German dubbed version has an altered dialog, he says that they'd all eat sauerkraut and listen to military marches, then he imitates some military marches instead of singing the anthem, as the first verse is considered too nationalist and generally not sung in public.
------------------------
Archie speaks in Italian: "Ma ho sposato una donna che preferisce lavorare in giardino a fare l'amore appassionato. Uno sbaglio grande!", what translates as: "But I married a woman who prefers working in the garden to making passionate love. A big mistake!". It can actually refer to Archie's marriage.
------------------------
George Thomason is played by Tom Georgeson.
------------------------
John Cleese chose the name Archie Leach, Cary Grant's real name, because he was born 20 miles away from where Grant was born (Hughenden Road, Horfield, Bristol), and because it was the closest Cleese could get to being Grant.
------------------------
John Cleese claims that this is Charles Crichton's movie. He merely took a co-director credit to reassure studio execs who were worried about Crichton's advanced age and the fact that he had not directed a theatrical movie for 23 years. The only work major work Cleese did as director was near the end of the shoot, when he handled various scenes mostly involving Michael Palin, to allow Crichton to start overseeing the editing.
------------------------
During the love scene, when Wanda opens up her blouse, Otto says in broken Italian "Ecco le due cupole del catedrale di Milano!" which translates "There are the two domes of the Milan cathedral." Milan's cathedral, actually, has no domes at all.
------------------------
When the film was aired on TV in the U.S., many stations deleted the "chips up the nostrils" scene, deeming it insensitive to individuals with mental impairments.
------------------------
For the French dubbed version when Wanda states that Otto mistook the Gettysburg Address for Lincoln's residence, it is replaced with Wanda stating that Otto mistook General Motors for a hero of the war of '14.
------------------------
Wanda kisses all of the major male characters at some point.
------------------------
Holds record of Longest Time to Reach #1 as of 2009. The movie was released on 15 July 1988 in the U.S., and reached #1 on 16 September 1988.
------------------------
When Otto (Kevin Kline), suggests possible snitchers to George, he suggests Kevin Delaney, which are Kline's first and middle names.
------------------------
John Cleese who plays British barrister Archie Leach actually entered Cambridge University as a law student although he never became a member of the British bar.
------------------------
In the original English version, Otto speaks Italian in some scenes with Wanda. In the Italian dubbed version he speaks Spanish.
------------------------
Director Charles Crichton's last film.
------------------------
John Cleese has said in interviews that Patricia Hayes was the only cast member not to have any material deleted during editing.
------------------------
The scene where Otto sits up in the background behind Wanda (Jamie Lee Curtis) is reminiscent of a scene in Halloween (1978), in which the character of Michael Myers sat up behind Curtis' character.
------------------------
Archie and Wendy sleep in separate beds, just like Basil and Sybil in Fawlty Towers (1975), also co-created by John Cleese.
------------------------
The poem Archie Leach recites in Russian for Wanda Gershwitz is Molitva (1839) by Mikhail Lermontov (1814-1841).
------------------------
Premiere voted this movie as one of "The 50 Greatest Comedies Of All Time" in 2006.
------------------------
One of Otto's lines throughout the movie is "Don't call me stupid." In The Ladykillers (1955), One Round didn't like to be called stupid either. Director Charles Crichton was a veteran of the Ealing films, most famously directing The Lavender Hill Mob (1951).
------------------------
The principal interior setting was the flat of Nicholas Lacey and playwright wife Juliet Aykroyd, in a loft development in a former warehouse at Reeds Wharf, Docklands, London.
------------------------
James Cossins' scenes (he played a bank teller) were cut from the film.
------------------------
In the opening sequence that introduces the principal cast, a model of the Eiffel Tower can be seen over Michael Palin's shoulder. This may be a reference to Charles Crichton's earlier film The Lavender Hill Mob (1951), in which Alec Guinness tries to smuggle the stolen gold out of England by melting the gold down and disguising the stolen gold as a model of the Eiffel Tower.
------------------------
The British Airways plane that can be seen at the airport is a Boeing 747-236 called "City of Manchester", registration G-BDXC. It was sold to European Skybus Ltd & scrapped in 2002 after about 25 years of service.
------------------------
Portia, Archie Leech's daughter, is played by Cynthia Cleese, John Cleese's actual daughter.
------------------------
The fish that Kevin Kline eats are made out of Jello. Kline claims that he offered to eat real, live fish, but the filmmakers wouldn't let him.
------------------------
The hymn that the choirboys sing at the dogs' funerals is: Miserere Dominus, miserere Dominus, Canis mortuus est, which translated into English is: Have mercy, Lord; have mercy, Lord; the dog is dead.
------------------------
The dog death scenes were originally filmed with entrails from a butchers scattered around the dead dog. Preview audiences reacted strongly to this, so the scenes were reshot with an obviously fake straw dog.
------------------------
When Otto fires his gun on the safe in the hideout the gun makes the sound of a silenced weapon, but his gun is not equipped with a silencer.
------------------------
At the beginning of the movie when Wanda tells Ken that Otto's dad used to beat him up, Ken says "good" but his lips don't match his voice.
------------------------
Reflected in a mirror in an early scene in George's flat.
------------------------
When Archie runs out of the house after the "burglary".
------------------------
The wedge that Ken shoots out of the pulley was inserted from the wrong side, so that the weight on the rope would have loosened it rather than it holding safely.
------------------------
Path in cement before the cement roller has been there.
------------------------
Wanda is in a car putting on red lipstick. After a cutaway and return to Wanda in close-up, she is wearing bright pink lipstick.
------------------------
After coming out of the airport building, Archie's suit doesn't have the two bullet rips from Otto's gunshots.
------------------------
Otto forces Archie into a barrel of sludge at the airport, waist deep. When Archie escapes the barrel, his clothes are dry.
------------------------
When Ken crashes the car into the trash, trash appears in the car.
------------------------
When the crew meets for the first time before the robbery, Otto throws a knife at a poster on the wall where it hits the a baby seal on a poster exactly between the eyes. Later in the movie the poster is undamaged.
------------------------
When Otto shoots the sleeves of Archie's suit in the airport, the hole in his left sleeve blows out before the shot.
------------------------
Ken causes the death of the first dog by releasing an attack dog. The old lady is holding three leashes, colored red, yellow, and blue. The attack dog is obviously headed for a small dog attached to the red leash, but during a quick cut the attack dog grabs the one on the yellow leash.
------------------------
The first goldfish Otto picks from the aquarium changes color just before he puts it in his mouth.
------------------------
The second getaway car is an Austin Metro City X 5 door model, it has two wing mirrors. However, the car they get out of in the lock-up is a Metro City as it has only one wing mirror and no 'X' decal on the rear wing.
------------------------
When Wendy and Portia see the flat tyre it is broad daylight. In the scene after John Cleese is seen in his house at night. Then the whole Wanda scene is played out before Wendy and Portia return to the house. Where did they park their car?
------------------------
Otto's phone call to the police gives George Thomason's address as "flat 3, Kipling Mansions, Murray Road, London, West 9" (W9). During the committal, a court clerk asks George to identify his address as "Kipling Mansions, Murray Avenue..."
------------------------
Archie already has a big lipstick kiss mark on his right cheek before Wanda kisses him.
------------------------
When Otto shoots at Ken in the steam roller a central support bar for the steam roller's canopy blocks the shot from hitting Ken. Then when subsequent images of the steam roller are shown there is no central support bar.
------------------------
When Ken shoots the piece of wood that keeps the giant block of cement from falling, the rope/wheel slides down in the incorrect counter-clockwise direction.
------------------------
When Wanda pretends to answer the phone, her right arm hangs at her side. In the next shot, her right hand is on her left wrist.
------------------------
When Wanda kisses Ken, she puts her arms around his neck. Then her hands are suddenly on his face, then around his neck, then back on his face.
------------------------
The position of Wanda's hands on Archie's shoulders and face as she kisses him in the apartment.
------------------------
Crew and camera visible in a mirror when Wanda visits Archie in his office for the first time.
------------------------
When Wanda is talking to George in prison, you can see crew equipment bobbing up and down over their heads.
------------------------
While Ken is on the phone with George making final arrangements, a camera shadow falls across him.
------------------------
The garage with the safe is in an archway under a very wide railway viaduct. But dialogue between Wanda and Ken places it in Fulham, which has no such viaduct.
------------------------
The flat that Archie borrows has an E1 postal address, putting it on the north side of the Thames, but has a view of Tower Bridge from the south side.
------------------------
After the family walks in on Archie's striptease act, one shot facing the family (from behind Archie) shows that Archie is wearing dark briefs (only visible in the non-letterboxed version).
------------------------
When Otto chases Archie across the lawn there are multiple shadows indicating at least three spotlights.
------------------------
When George tries to attack Wanda by running over the desks in the courtroom, its clearly someone else doing it.
------------------------
Spotlight glare and (faintly seen) camera lens reflection visible in door glass as Wendy storms outside while demanding that Archie get her necklace back with a "YOU'RE the bloody barrister!" (slam).
------------------------
After Otto shoots his way out of the broom closet at Heathrow, he shoves his silenced pistol down the front of his pants. This would result in considerable discomfort, if not serious burns, after discharging five shots in a short period of time. However, due to Otto's insanity, he probably wouldn't have cared or felt it.
------------------------
The 3 thieves are wearing dark, solid-colored, full-body suits during the robbery. The glass kicked onto Georges' pants leg would have wound up on the bodysuit pants leg, not his trousers underneath (which are a finer linen pin-stripped material).
------------------------
heist|silencer|courtroom|american abroad|animal abuse|barrister|stuttering|weir|yelling|killing a dog|italian language spoken|cutical scissors|run over by a steamroller|gag|heart ÂÂ attack|excuse|barrel|zoophilia|screwball|
AKAs Titles:
Argentina - Los enredos de Wanda
Austria - Ein Fisch namens Wanda
Belgium (Flemish title) - Die vis was Wanda
Bulgaria (Bulgarian title) - Риба, наÑ€ечена Уанда
Brazil - Um Peixe Chamado Wanda
Canada (French title) - Un ange dè nommè Wanda
Denmark - Fisken de kaldte Wanda
Spain (Catalan title) - Un peix anomenat Wanda
Spain - Un pez llamado Wanda
Finland (Swedish title) - En fisk som heter Wanda
Finland - Kala nimeltä Wanda
France - Un poisson nommè Wanda
Greece (transliterated ISO-LATIN-1 title) - Ena psari me to onoma Wanda
Greece (reissue title) - Ena psari pou to elegan Wanda
Croatia - Riba zvana Wanda
Hungary - A hal neve: Wanda
Israel (Hebrew title) - Dug Oo'Shmo Wanda
Italy - Un pesce di nome Wanda
Mexico - Los enredos de Wanda
Norway - En fisk ved navn Wanda
Peru - Los enredos de Wanda
Poland - Rybka zwana Wanda
Portugal - Um Peixe Chamado Wanda
Serbia - Riba zvana Vanda
Russia - Рыбка по имени Ð’анда
Sweden - En fisk som heter Wanda
Turkey (Turkish title) - Wanda adinda bir balik
West Germany - Ein Fisch namens Wanda
Release Dates:
Certifications:
Argentina:13 / Australia:M / Canada:18A / Finland:K-14 / Iceland:L / Ireland:15 / New Zealand:PG / Norway:15 / Peru:14 / Portugal:M/12 / Singapore:M18 / South Korea:18 / Spain:T / Sweden:15 / UK:15 / USA:R / West Germany:16