- “In Eat Your Catfish, Kathryn Arjomand transforms her ALS trials into a powerful narrative of anger, acceptance, and offbeat humor.” - Review in Variety
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- “Eat Your Catfish is one of the most emotionally enthralling cinematic experiences you will ever have. It will leave you vibrating with anger and sympathy, but also joy and hope.” - Review in The Film Yap
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- “An astonishingly open, moving, funny and challenging insight into the world of a woman paralysed but with her mind intact, Eat Your Catfish is remarkable in portraying an intimate and powerful portrait of a family stretched to its very breaking point.” - Review in Business Doc Europe
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- “At no point does this feel like a tired stereotype of disability. There are no images of silent saints, doting husbands, or selfless children. They are allowed to be flawed humans, trying to do the right thing for the one they love.” - Review in Brig
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- “Crucially, the film gives Kathryn a platform to tell - and indeed show - her story. Her lingering hope is that viewers don’t think she’s pathetic, but plucky... This film grants her that wish.” - Review in Screen Daily
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“We were compelled to tell a true story, without contrived heroics, of the daily challenges - both
practical and emotional - of in-home care for a disabled and terminally ill person. We wanted to show a family’s struggle to find meaning in a hopeless situation and hold on to love even without transcending into some higher state of selflessness or finding the energy to serve the greater good as activists.” -Adam Isenberg, Noah Amir Arjomand, and Senem Tüzen, Filmmakers
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