Finding Nemo

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Finding Nemo
Image:Nemo-poster2.jpg
Original theatrical poster
Directed by Andrew Stanton
Lee Unkrich (co-director)
Produced by Graham Walters
Written by Story:
Andrew Stanton
Screenplay:
Andrew Stanton
Bob Peterson
David Reynolds
Starring Albert Brooks
Ellen DeGeneres
Alexander Gould
Willem Dafoe
Brad Garrett
Allison Janney
Austin Pendleton
Stephen Root
Geoffrey Rush
Nicolas Bird
Erica Beck
LuLu Ebeling
Barry Humphries
Music by Thomas Newman
Robbie Williams (end credits song, "Wax My Cheeks")
Cinematography Sharon Calahan
Jeremy Lasky
Editing by David Ian Salter
Distributed by Walt Disney Pictures
Release date(s) Image:Flag of the United States.svg Image:Flag of Canada.svg May 30, 2003
Image:Flag of the Philippines.svg July 1, 2003
Image:Flag of Australia.svg August 27, 2003
Image:Flag of the United Kingdom.svg October 10, 2003
Running time 104 min
Country Image:Flag of the United States.svg United States
Language English
Budget $94 million[1]
Gross revenue Domestic:
$339,714,978
Worldwide: $864,625,978
DVD Sales:
over 40 million copies
All Movie Guide profile
IMDb profile

Finding Nemo is an Academy Award-winning computer-animated film produced by Pixar Animation Studios and released to theaters by Walt Disney Pictures and Buena Vista Distribution. It was released in the United States/Canada on May 30, 2003, in Australia on August 27, 2003 and in the UK on 10 October, 2003. The movie is the fifth Disney/Pixar feature film and the first to be released during the summer season. In 2005, Time magazine listed it as one of the top 100 films ever made.[2]

The movie was released on a 2-disc DVD on November 4, 2003 in the United States and Canada, in Australia on January 16, 2004, and the UK on February 27, 2004. It went on to become the best selling DVD of all time, with well over 40 million copies sold as of 2006.[3]

Contents

[edit] Plot

When the clownfish Marlin (Albert Brooks), loses his wife, Coral (Elizabeth Perkins), and all but one of his unborn children to a barracuda, he promises that he will never let anything happen to the remaining egg, which he names Nemo.

Years later, Nemo (Alexander Gould) begins his first day at school and is frustrated and embarrassed by his overprotective father. Marlin has constantly warned Nemo about the dangers of the ocean. To show his father that there's nothing to be afraid of, Nemo deliberately disobeys his father by swimming out into open water but, in the process, is captured by a scuba-diving dentist. Marlin races after the dentist's boat but quickly loses it. He soon runs into a blue tang named Dory (Ellen DeGeneres), who is unfortunately suffering from short-term memory loss. Seemingly abandoned, she decides to help Marlin search for his son. She helps him recover a divers mask that had fallen from the dentist's boat and finds he has been taken to Sydney.

Meanwhile Nemo is placed in a fish tank and soon finds out that he is to be the birthday present of a young girl named Darla (LuLu Ebeling), who is described as "a fish killer". He soon discovers the other fish in the tank are all bent on escape, with Gill (Willem Dafoe) proposes an escape plan involving Nemo jamming the filter in the tank.

While Marlin and Dory are traveling with sea turtles on the East Australian Current, Marlin tells some of them about how he is looking for his son. This story travels among the sea creatures and eventually Nemo hears it. Nemo is inspired by this to attempt to jam the filter. The tank begins to get dirty the fish believe the dentist will take them out of the tank to clean it. However, he instead installs a laser filter which cleans the tank while the fish are sleeping.

Marlin and Dory arrive in Sydney and meet a brown pelican named Nigel (Geoffrey Rush) who agrees to take them to the dentist's office. The dentist has put Nemo in a bag to give to his niece, but Nemo pretends to be dead so that the dentist will flush him down the toilet. Marlin, Dory and Nigel arrive at the office and, seeing Nemo, believe he really is dead. After they are thrown out the window Gill helps Nemo escape down the dentist's sink to the ocean.

Marlin thanks Dory and heads home on his own. Dory then bumps into Nemo and she is able to reunite them. Moments later, Dory is caught in a fishing net. Nemo has a plan to tell the fish to swim down, but Marlin is reluctant to let him go for fear that he will lose him again. Marlin realizes he must let him go and they are able to save Dory.

In the epilogue, Nemo leaves for school, with Marlin telling him to "go have an adventure" and the fish in the dentist's tank are able to escape however, they are still in their plastic bags. As the last lines one of the fish asks "now what?".

[edit] Production

The movie was dedicated to Glenn McQueen, a pixar animator who died of melanoma in October 2002, seven months before the film was released. Lightning McQueen was named after him.

Robin Williams, who worked for Eisner and Disney before in Aladdin and had a bitter fall out with him and The Walt Disney Company after going back on the deal they had (which can be explained in the Aladdin page), has hinted in an interview that he refused a role in this film, because it would mean working for Michael Eisner again. He will not state which role he refused[1].

[edit] Characters

See List of Finding Nemo characters

[edit] Reception

Finding Nemo set a record as the highest grossing opening weekend for an animated feature, making $70 million (surpassed in 2007 by Shrek the Third). It went on to gross more than $864.6 million worldwide, in the process becoming Pixar's most commercially successful film to date. It received a 98% "fresh" rating at RottenTomatoes.com. The film's prominent use of clownfish prompted mass purchase of the animals for children's pets in the United States, even though the movie portrayed the use of fish as pets negatively and that saltwater aquariums are notably tricky and expensive to maintain.[4] As of 2004, in Vanuatu, clownfish were being caught on a large scale for sale as pets, motivated by the demand.[5]

At the same time, the film had a central theme that "all drains lead back to the ocean" (Nemo escapes from the aquarium by going down a sink drain, ending up in the sea.) Since water typically undergoes treatment before leading to the ocean, the JWC Environmental company quipped that a more realistic title for the movie might be Grinding Nemo.[6] However, in Sydney, much of the sewer system does pass directly to outfall pipes deep offshore, without a high level of treatment (although pumping and some filtering occurs.)[7] Additionally, according to the DVD, there was a cut sequence with Nemo going through a treatment plant's mechanisms before ending up in the ocean pipes.

Tourism in Australia strongly increased during the summer and autumn of 2003, with many tourists wanting to swim off the coast of Eastern Australia to "find Nemo."[citation needed] The Australian Tourism Commission (ATC) launched several marketing campaigns in China and the USA in order to improve tourism in Australia many of them using Finding Nemo movie clips. [2][8] Queensland, Australia also used Finding Nemo to draw tourists to promote its state for vacationers.[9]

[edit] Legal challenges

Image:Pierrot and nemo.JPG
The similarities between the two creations sparked a long and expensive lawsuit between Pierrot author Franck Le Calvez and Walt Disney Pictures.

In late 2003, the French children's book author Franck Le Calvez claimed that Finding Nemo's story and characters were stolen from his book Pierrot Le Poisson-Clown (Pierrot the Clownfish). The idea of Pierrot was protected in 1995 and the book was released in France in November 2002.[10] Franck Le Calvez and his lawyer, Pascal Kamina, demanded from Disney a share of the profits from merchandising articles sold in France. In March 2004, Le Calvez and Kamina lost the lawsuit.[11] Two years later, in February 2005, a New Jersey dentist named Dennis G. Sternberg filed suit against Disney/Pixar, alleging they had plagiarised his concept for a film entitled Peanut Butter the Jelly Fish, which he had discussed with Andrew Stanton in the 1990s.[12] Sternberg soon dropped the lawsuit, saying he could not afford to lose.

[edit] Awards

Award Category Winner/nominee Won
Academy Awards Best Animated Film Yes
Best Original Score Thomas Newman No
Best Sound Editing
Best Screenplay - Original Andrew Stanton
Bob Peterson
David Reynolds
Saturn Awards Best Animated Film Yes
Best DVD Special Edition Release No
Best Music Thomas Newman
Best Screenplay Andrew Stanton
Bob Peterson
David Reynolds
Best Supporting Actress Ellen DeGeneres Yes
Annie Awards Outstanding Animated Film Yes
Outstanding Character Animation David Devan No
Outstanding Character Animation Gini Santos
Outstanding Character Animation Doug Sweetland Yes
Outstanding Character Design Ricky Nierva
Outstanding Directing Andrew Stanton
Lee Unkrich
Outstanding Effects Animation Martin Nguyen
Outstanding Effects Animation Justin Paul Ritter No
Outstanding Music Thomas Newman Yes
Outstanding Production Design Ralph Eggleston
Outstanding Voice Acting Ellen DeGeneres
(as the voice of Dory)
Outstanding Writing Andrew Stanton
Bob Peterson
David Reynolds
BAFTA Film Awards Best Screenplay - Original Andrew Stanton
Bob Peterson
David Reynolds
No
Broadcast Film Critics Best Animated Film Yes
Best Film No
Dallas-Fort Worth Film Critics Best Animated Film Yes
Florida Film Critics Best Animated Film Yes
Golden Globe Awards Best Film - Musical or Comedy No
Kansas City Film Critics Best Animated Film Yes
Las Vegas Film Critics Best Animated Film Yes
National Board of Review Best Animated Film Yes
Online Film Critics Best Animated Film Yes
Phoenix Film Critics Best Animated Film Yes
Best Film No
Toronto Film Critics Best Animated Film Yes
Visual Effects Society Outstanding Character Animation Andrew Gordon
Brett Coderre
Yes
Outstanding Character Animation David DeVan
Gini Santos
No
Washington DC Area Film Critics Outstanding Character Animation Bob Peterson
David Reynolds
Andrew Stanton
No
Kyle Young Awards Favourite Film 2003 Yes

The film received many awards, including:

Finding Nemo was also nominated for:

[edit] Finding Nemo - The Musical

Image:NemoTurtle.jpg
Larger-than-life puppets in a scene from the stage adaptation of Finding Nemo at Disney's Animal Kingdom.

The stage musical Tarzan Rocks! occupied the Theater in the Wild at Disney's Animal Kingdom in Orlando, Florida from 1999 to 2006. When, in January 2006, it closed, it was rumored that a musical adaptation of Finding Nemo would replace it.[13] This was confirmed in April 2006, when Disney announced that the adaptation, with new songs written by Tony Award-winning Avenue Q composer Robert Lopez and his wife, Kristen Anderson-Lopez, would "combine puppets, dancers, acrobats and animated backdrops" and open in late 2006.[14] Tony Award-winning director Peter Brosius signed on to direct the show, with Michael Curry, who designed puppets for Disney's successful stage version of The Lion King, serving as leading puppet and production designer.

Anderson-Lopez said that the couple agreed to write the adaptation of "one of their favorite movies of all time" after considering "The idea of people coming in [to see the musical] at 4, 5 or 6 and saying, 'I want to do that'....So we want to take it as seriously as we would a Broadway show."[15] To condense the feature-length film to thirty minutes, she said she and Lopez focused on a single theme from the movie, the idea that "The world's dangerous and beautiful."[15]

The half-hour show (which is performed five times daily) went into previews at the Theater in the Wild on November 5, 2006, and opened on January 24, 2007. Several musical numbers took direct inspiration from lines in the film, including "(In The) Big Blue World," "Fish Are Friends, Not Food," "Just Keep Swimming," and "Go With the Flow." In January 2007, a New York studio recording of the show was released on iTunes, with Lopez and Anderson-Lopez providing the voices for Marlin and Dory, respectively. Avenue Q star Stephanie D'Abruzzo also appeared on the recording, as Sheldon/Deb.

It is unknown whether the show will be expanded and transfer to Broadway, though Walt Disney Parks & Resorts executive Ann Hamburger has said that "she would love for that to happen."[15] Nemo is notable for being the first non-musical animated film to which Disney has added songs to produce a stage musical.

[edit] Attractions

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ Box Office Mojo: Finding Nemo (Retrieved on December 14, 2007)
  2. ^ http://www.time.com/time/2005/100movies/the_complete_list.html
  3. ^ Boone, Louis E. Contemporary Business 2006, Thomson South-Western, page 4 - ISBN 0324320892
  4. ^ Jackson, Elizabeth. "Acquiring Nemo", The Business Report, 29 November 2003. Retrieved on 2006-11-10. 
  5. ^ Corcoran, Mark. "Vanuatu - Saving Nemo", ABC Foreign Correspondent, 9 November 2004. Retrieved on 2006-10-23. 
  6. ^ Company Warns of 'Grinding Nemo', FoxNews.com/AP, 2003-06-06.
  7. ^ Coastal sewage treatment plants operated by Sydney Water. Sydney Water (unknown date). Retrieved on 2006-11-26. North Head and Bondi would be the closest sewage treatment plants to the location of the film. Further explanation of "primary" sewage treatment can be found here.
  8. ^ Mitchell, Peter. "Nemo-led recovery hope", The Age, 3 June, 2003. Retrieved on 2006-10-23. 
  9. ^ Dennis, Anthony. "Sydney ignores Nemo", The Sydney Morning Herald, 11 August, 2003. Retrieved on 2006-10-23. 
  10. ^ Willsher, Kim. "Disney 'copied my idea for Nemo' claims French author", Telegraph, 28 December, 2003. Retrieved on 2007-12-17. 
  11. ^ "Author loses against Disney's 'Nemo'", USA Today/AP, 2004-03-15. Retrieved on 2007-03-21. 
  12. ^ "NJ diving dentist says 'Nemo' film was his idea" (reprint), Newsday, 2005-02-16. Retrieved on 2007-03-21. 
  13. ^ Finding Nemo - The Musical, Walt Disney World Magic.
  14. ^ Hernandez, Ernio. "Avenue Q Composer Lopez Co-Pens Musical Finding Nemo for Disney," Playbill.com (2006-04-10).
  15. ^ a b c Maupin, Elizabeth. "Swimming with big fish", Orlando Sentinel, 2006-11-26. Retrieved on 2007-03-22. 

[edit] External links

Wikiquote has a collection of quotations related to:
Finding Nemo
Preceded by
Bruce Almighty
List of 2003 Box Office #1 Movies
2003-06-01
Succeeded by
2 Fast 2 Furious
Preceded by
2 Fast 2 Furious
List of 2003 Box Office #1 Movies
2003-06-15
Succeeded by
Hulk
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