Watching her in her original role will remind you why you and the world fell in love with her in the first place. The plot of the movie revolves around a father who's overprotective of his handicapped son due to his wife's death, and if that doesn't hit you right in the heart then you're made of stone. You may have forgotten that this movie has a ton of thrilling scenes. That angler fish still gives me nightmares. Seriously, there's so much controlled craziness going on here that I don't even know where to begin.
How can someone in the ocean be so dry? Nemo , just like any respectable Pixar film, made audiences laugh, cry, and root for the delightful fish.
For millennials specifically — with the stresses of work, student loans, and financial realities — sometimes a kids movie can serve as the perfect antidote to life. After all, Finding Nemo , both at its release and upon re-watch of which there have been many , added so much to boring, everyday life.
Turtle is my father. Just keep swimming. And all this interwoven in kid friendly environment, which still has some dark sides to it. Watch it, and be amazed! When I was a kid my circle of friends included a guy we nicknamed Nemo because his last name he was Polish had an abundance of c's and z's in it that made pronunciation impossible.
That really doesn't have anything to do with the movie, but until "Finding Nemo" came along, I had never given my friend Nemo's nickname a second thought. I have to say, the picture was pretty clever with it's characters and dialog.
When little Nemo wound up in Australia I was asking myself how the writers were going to pull off the long shot of having father Marlin track him down and get him back to the ocean. They actually did it in a way that seemed believable enough even though you have to stretch your sensibilities.
You could say the same about some serious dramas that are being made today. This one is tailor made for kids young and old and it's message of persevering against all odds is a valuable one. There's also some slick inside jokes if you're quick enough to keep up the pace; the summit of Mount Wannahockaloogie still has me cracking up.
After his son is captured in the Great Barrier Reef and taken to Sydney, a timid clownfish sets out on a journey to bring him home.
I do not even feel the need to write a review of this film. It is so well known, and so well loved, that I have no reason to praise it. Do I really need to convince anyone that this is a great film? Do I need to explain why? If I had to say anything, it is that this was probably the film that got people to fall in love with Ellen Degeneres. I feel like her sitcom and subsequent talk show were popular, but not hugely so Well done, Ellen.
I guess that what truly differentiates the children's movies that my generation has grown up watching from those of previous generations is the various references to other things think the popular culture references in "Shrek" I and II, and the genie's Rodney Dangerfield and Jack Nicholson imitations in "Aladdin".
It focuses on Marlin Albert Brooks , a tense clown-fish searching for his son Nemo, who got caught by an Australian dentist. Maybe it sounds too wimpy to say that the movie is about the importance of having solid relationships in one's life, but you might say that. And the popular culture references?
I never would have imagined a kids' movie spoofing scenes from Alfred Hitchcock's and Stanley Kubrick's movies, but they do it here. I don't know how they did it, but they did it. A very well done movie.
This was one of the most successful Disney films at the cinema to date. It is the underwater story of a young clown fish named Nemo Alexander Gould taken by divers and put into a tank. Along the journey Marland and Dory encounter three sharks, including Bruce Barry Humphries, aka Dame Edna Everage named after the rubber Shark in the Jaws series , stinging jellyfish, turtles in a current tunnel, including "dude" Crush Andrew Stanton and much more, but he finds him eventually, and everything's fine.
Very good! Tweekums 1 September Now Marlin must brave the dangers of the open ocean to find Nemo again. He is accompanied by a regal blue tang named Dory; Dory has a problem with her short term memory so quickly forgets everything. Together they find a mask lost by one of the divers and learn that they came from Sydney; on the way there they encounter sharks, an angler fish, jelly fish and a group of sea turtles.
Meanwhile Nemo finds himself in the aquarium of a North Sydney dentist. This, Pixar's fifth film, got off to a great start, it was darker than I expected but done in a way that shouldn't be too upsetting for even the youngest of viewers. Marlin's wife is killed by a barracuda and every egg except Nemo is lost but none of the details are shown. Once that is over it quickly moves on to introducing young Nemo then his capture by the diver that sets the story in motion. The parallel stories of Marlin, and his new friend Dory, searching for Nemo and Nemo's interaction with the other fish in the aquarium and their plans for his escape are nicely interwoven.
Each has plenty of drama; none of it is too scary though and where there are scary moments they are lightened by some comedy such as the trio of sharks that are trying to stop eating fish. The characters may be fish but they still have plenty of personality; especially the central trio of Marlin, Dory and Nemo. Each of these is distinctive; Marlin is timid and pessimistic, Nemo is full of youthful enthusiasm and Dory is cheery despite her memory problems.
The secondary characters are fun too; I particularly liked the 'surfer-dude' sea turtles! As one would expect from Pixar the animation is top notch, the undersea environment looks fantastic and the actors who provide the voices to the characters to an excellent job. Overall this is a fun film that, while aimed at a younger audience, can be enjoyed by all ages. Quinoa 11 June Finding Nemo, from co-directors Andrew Stanton and Lee Unkrich who have worked as directors on past pixar films like Bug's life and Toy Story 2 have devised an adventure film that takes the viewer far beyond anything imaginable with Little Mermaid.
In fact, much of the humor and dialogue reminded me of the sophistication that went with an animated movie like Antz, where the top celebrity personalities came forth to give voice to wonderful creature creations. And speaking of Antz, this time there is a neurotic, obsessive caricature of a comic in Finding Nemo, here named Marlin and played by Albert Brooks. After his wife, a clown fish, and his hundreds of eggs are devoured by a larger fish, he finds one egg left and becomes compulsive in securing it's safety.
His son Nemo, it turns out, gets caught in a diver's net and taken to a Dentist's office in Sydney, Australia. This sets Marlin off on his quest across the ocean, along with a fish who forgets things as soon as their mentioned, voiced by Ellen Degeneres. They encounter sharks in rehab, turtles with Californian accents, a whale quasi-Pinnochio there , and much more, all the while little Nemo, inside the fish-tank and renamed Sharkbate, starts to gain the courage his father never considered he had, and vice-versa.
The Pixar team, like in their previous treats, deliver worlds that usually can only exist in the imagination - the under-the-ocean scenes, making up about 65 percent of the film, are obviously breathtaking in design while not going overboard in realism, and the scenes in the dentist office and on the pier are precise too. It's like we've thought we've been here before, but now the filmmakers take us right into the nexus of it. This splendor, along with the voice work by Brooks, Degeneres, Willem Dafoe as the leader of the fish-tank pack, Geoffrey Rush as a pelican, and all the supporting parts, give anyone in any age group the finest animated spectacle of the summer.
By the way, those seagulls are the funniest thing Pixar's come up with since the aliens in Toy Story! So nine years after first enjoying this at theatres, I decided to watch this again in 3-D with my movie theatre-working friend. I was astounded to find out how much I forgot since that first time so I was mostly experiencing this as if I hadn't seen this before which made for a wonderfully touching, thrilling, and, of course, very funny time for both me and my friend.
And seeing their adventures in looking for Marlin's son Nemo was even more pleasurable when we find out who all three main players encounter. Really, all I'll say now is if you like seeing classic movies on the big screen, I highly recommend you once again watch Finding Nemo at your neighborhood movie house right now!
Coventry 10 December I'll be totally honest and confirm to you that everything what they say about this movie is true. It's a brilliantly animated masterpiece with lots of humor that actually works and a plot that really brings tears to your eyes from time to time. The modern artists of Pixar never cease to amaze the audience in expanding their horizons. It may occur to you that many pelicans make a living by eating fish, not rescuing them, but some of the characters in this movie have evolved admirably into vegetarians.
As Marlin and Dory conduct their odyssey, for example, they encounter three carnivores who have formed a chapter of Fish-Eaters Anonymous, and chant slogans to remind them that they abstain from fin-based meals. The first scenes in "Finding Nemo" are a little unsettling, as we realize the movie is going to be about fish, not people or people-based characters like toys and monsters. But of course animation has long since learned to enlist all other species in the human race, and to care about fish quickly becomes as easy as caring about mice or ducks or Bambi.
When I review a movie like "Finding Nemo," I am aware that most members of its primary audience do not read reviews. Their parents do, and to them and adults who do not have children as an excuse, I can say that "Finding Nemo" is a pleasure for grown-ups. There are jokes we get that the kids don't, and the complexity of Albert Brooks' neuroses, and that enormous canvas filled with creatures that have some of the same hypnotic beauty as--well, fish in an aquarium.
They may appreciate another novelty: This time the dad is the hero of the story, although in most animation it is almost always the mother. Roger Ebert was the film critic of the Chicago Sun-Times from until his death in In , he won the Pulitzer Prize for distinguished criticism. Willem Dafoe as Gill.
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