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Finding Nemo - 5/5 Stars
Voices of: Albert Brooks, Ellen DeGeneres, Willem Dafoe, Alexander Gould,
Stephen Root, Geoffrey Rush, Eric Bana, John Ratzenburger
Year: 2003
MPAA Classification: G (mild peril)
=REVIEW BY JOHN ULMER=
Pixar Animation Studios has a very good knack for making thoughtful,
intelligent and humorous family films (note that I didn't say kid films).
"Toy Story" 1 & 2 and "Monsters, Inc." are some of my favorite family films;
"Finding Nemo" isn't one of my favorites, but it isn't disappointing like "A
Bug's Life," and it is thoughtful, intelligent, humorous and incredibly
watchable, just like the other Pixar films.
As always, Pixar takes a world of something and completely builds their
story around it. In "Toy Story" they gave life to toys and created the world
through their eyes. In "Monsters, Inc.," they showed us the monster world.
In my review on "A Bug's Life," I said that the reason the film didn't work
very much is because it was about bugs, and not about something mystical
like toys or monsters that bring back childhood memories. Well, I guess I
was sorta wrong, because "Finding Nemo" is all about fish, nothing too
mystical about fish, and I still loved it.
This tale takes place underwater with the fish Marlin (voiced by Albert
Brooks), whose spouse and baby fish eggs get eaten by a vicious shark in the
beginning. All but one egg which Marlin names Nemo.
Years later Nemo (voiced by Alexander Gould, Elliot's son?) is a bit older,
and heading off to fish school for the first time. But haunted by the fact
that his spouse and offspring were all killed years ago, Marlin is extremely
over-protective of his one remaining family member. Nemo, sick of being
treated like a baby, proves how brave he is by swimming near a fishing boat,
only to be captured by a scuba-diving dentist. And so Marlin heads off to
find Nemo, with the help of his newfound companion Dory (voice of Ellen
DeGeneres), who has short-term memory loss and forgets things sooner than
she can carry whatever she is doing out. (Like when she is showing Marlin
the way towards a fishing boat and suddenly forgets why Marlin is following
her.)
Pixar doesn't let down the audience on this film. There are a few things
that one can always expect from Pixar films: They can expect something (such
as toys) to be given their own world. They can expect that world to be given
careful attention to detail. And they can expect humor.
"Finding Nemo" gives fish their own world, and the underwater realm they
live in is paid careful attention, painstakingly captured on film with
computer graphics. And the humor is always there. All the characters are
funny. I especially like the sequences from the inside of a fish tank in the
dentist's office, with a bunch of fish including Gill (Willem Dafoe's vocal
talents), who constantly tries to escape. By doing so, Gill has suffered
major injuries, including landing on the dentist's tools and getting sliced
up. This is, of course, a parody of escaping POWs. The fact that Willem
Dafoe was in the great war movie "Platoon" might have something to do with
that.
This is taken from my "Monsters, Inc." review: "Pixar once again not only
expands our mind, but our very worlds. I respect their company and
commitment values very much, as you can read in my 'Toy Story' review. They
stick to the values that made Disney films so family-friendly back in the
fifties and sixties: Respect for the audience, respect for quality, and
respect for the audience's INTELLIGENCE, something Disney, who has recently
coughed up a bunch of lousy, thoughtless sequels, has forgotten. Now, I know
that LEGALLY Disney is co-creator of 'Toy Story' and 'Monsters, Inc.,' but
they really are not. They just give Pixar the money and get their name
branded on the front box of the film. And even then, I have heard multiple
claims that Disney is very mean-spirited towards Pixar (read into sequel
trouble for 'Toy Story 3') and gives them the bare minimum.
With "Finding Nemo," I still stick towards what I said. Pixar Animation
Studios is probably the best family film company out there right now, I
really hope they seperate from Disney some day and form their own production
company. They know what interests both kids and adults, and it's almost
creepy how they can make their films so engaging and fun to watch. This is
one to take the kids to, and afterwards, maybe even sneak back into again by
yourself.
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X-RAMR-ID: 35380
X-Language: en
X-RT-ReviewID: 1179253
X-RT-TitleID: 1122673
X-RT-SourceID: 1382
X-RT-AuthorID: 6769
X-RT-RatingText: 5/5
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