Came Out | The Day The Fish

The 1967 film , directed by Michael Cacoyannis, is a satirical black comedy that explores the absurdity of nuclear tension and human greed. Inspired by the real-life Palomares B-52 crash in 1966, where nuclear weapons were briefly lost over Spain, the film serves as a cautionary tale about the potential for environmental and human catastrophe. Plot and Satire

Set in the then-future year of 1972 on the fictional Greek island of Karos, the narrative begins when a NATO plane carrying nuclear weapons and a radioactive device in a "black box" crashes. The Day the Fish Came Out

The film is noted for its futuristic and highly stylized costumes, which were groundbreaking for the era. The 1967 film , directed by Michael Cacoyannis,

A search team arrives disguised as hotel developers to recover the weapons. Their flamboyant sportswear—designed by Cacoyannis himself—leads the pilots to believe they are a group of visiting tourists rather than a military operation. The film is noted for its futuristic and

Two pilots wash ashore in their underwear and must hide their identity, leading to a series of comedic misunderstandings with the local population.

The titular "day the fish came out" refers to the final scenes where thousands of dead, poisoned fish float to the surface, signaling the invisible but total destruction of the island's ecosystem. Production Details The Day the Fish Came Out (1967) - IMDb