In-Depth Review
Finding Nemo is rated G:
It's never easy being a small fish in a big sea. Just when Marlin (Albert Brooks), a beautiful orange and white clown fish, feels he's found a comfortable home where his wife can await the birth of a few hundred children, along comes a neighborhood predator. His little body being no match for the huge shark, Marlin is left unconscious. Upon awakening, he discovers the terrible truth. His entire family is wiped out -- save for one little fish egg from which will hatch his son Nemo (Alexander Gould).
If he was previously over protective, the father's attitude now borders on paranoia. But his habitual nagging leaves Nemo feeling he doesn't need Dad telling him what to do. On his first day of school, the headstrong child swims off from the crowd to demonstrate his independence, completely neglecting to look for danger. In short order, he's captured in the net of an eager scuba diving dentist, and placed within a dental office aquarium in Sydney, Australia.
Back in the ocean, Marlin's fear turns into desperation. The only answer to his pleas for help is a sincere but memory-challenged blue tang fish named Dory (Ellen DeGeneres). While at first unimpressed with Dory's non-stop nattering, Marlin changes his opinion after she demonstrates her exceptional talent: When the diver's lost goggles are discovered, Dory can read the dentist's name and address.
With this information, the pair determines first to find Sydney, and then look for Nemo. Of course the long trip is anything but smooth sailing, and chance meetings with sharks, jellyfish, and hungry birds often leave the duo swimming for their lives.
Nemo should have no trouble finding success as it rides the wave of Pixar's solid reputation for family movies. Yet the studio that created both Toy Story films has not crafted the comedy in this movie with its usual panache. Adults may be disappointed at the lack of "dual layered" jokes-- those laughs which work on different levels for both young and old. However, the same children this script is aimed at may be alarmed by the constant peril the characters find themselves in.
What parents will appreciate most about Finding Nemo is a storyline where kids don't always know best. Both junior and senior fish come to realize their attitudes were contributing factors in creating a much bigger problem.
Undoubtedly, audiences of all ages will feel compelled to say, "You've never seen computer animation like this." At times nearly photographic, every detail down to the buffeting of the waves and movement of the fishes' anatomy is included in stunning detail, making this a movie that's certainly worth going to sea.
Studio: Pixar.
Discussion Ideas: Talk About the Movie...
Near the beginning of the movie, Marlin begs Nemo not to do something dangerous. Why does Nemo choose to ignore him? Have you ever made a poor decision simply because your parents told you not to?
Dory has a very different attitude about life than Marlin. How can being optimistic help you meet life’s challenges? When can being overly optimistic cause problems? Do you think Dory sometimes did things that could have put her and Marlin in danger?
Video alternatives
Pixar teamed up with Disney to make such other films as Toy Story, Toy Story 2, A Bug’s Life, and Monsters Inc.

Rod Gustafson has worked in various media industries since 1977. He founded Parent Previews in 1993, and today continues to write and broadcast the reviews in newspapers, on radio and (of course) on the Internet. He currently serves as the President of the Alberta Association for Media Awareness, a provincial non-profit society. He also authors a regular column for