The Catch () is a 1961 Japanese war drama film directed by Nagisa à Âshima. It is based on the prize-winning novella Shiiku (translated as The Catch or Prize Stock) by Kenzaburà  à Âe.
During the summer of 1945, a U.S. plane crashes in a rural Japanese area. The villagers capture the surviving black pilot and lock him in a stable, awaiting official instructions how to proceed with their prisoner. While waiting, seething conflicts in the community come to the surface. Takano, the domineering and abusive local landlord, uses the villagers' anger and frustrations, which they blame on the captive, to turn the attention away from his own misdeeds and eventually kills him. Shortly after, Japan's defeat is declared. The community decides to make deserter Jirà Â, who had been hiding in the woods to escape his draft, responsible for the incident. Jirà  first agrees, but then rebels against the plan, and is accidentally killed in a subsequent fight. The last scene shows the burning of Jirà Â's and the captive's bodies, looked upon by Jirà Â's younger brother Hachiko, who had unsuccessfully tried to save the prisoner.
The Catch was à Âshima's first independently produced film after leaving the Shochiku studio.
The Catch was presented at retrospectives on à Âshima at the Museum of Modern Art, the Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive and the Harvard Film Archive. It was screened at the Tokyo International Film Festival in 2011.
à Âe's novella was again adapted in 2011 as Gibier d'élevage by director Rithy Panh, who transferred the setting to early 1970s Cambodia.