Finding Dory (2016)
PG
4 Stars out of 5
Director Andrew Stanton, Angus MaclaneWriter Andrew Stanton, Victoria Strouse, Bob Peterson
Ellen DeGeneres Dory
Albert Brooks Marlin
Ed O’Neill Hank
Kaitlin Olson Destiny
Hayden Rolence Nemo
Ty Hardin Bailey
Dianne Keaton Jenny, mom
Eugene Levy Charlie, dad
Idris Elba Fluke
Dominc West Rudder
Bob Peterson Mr. Ray
Sigourney Weaver herself
In the summer of 2016, the summer of sequels, Disney/Pixar
has released a long awaited sequel to 2003’s “Finding Nemo”. This new movie has
with justification recently been promoted by Ellen DeGeneres; she as Dory in “Finding
Nemo” was the comic highlight in that film. Now in 2016 after Disney gave the
movie the green-light roughly in the summer of 2012 when they announced they had
signed “Finding Nemo” director Andrew Stanton to come back for the sequel, the
world, or a good chunk of the English-speaking part of it and certainly Ellen
was filled with anticipation. She and Albert Brooks were announced a year after the Stanton
announcement in 2013 to have agreed to reprise their roles of Dory and the worry-wart
of a father to Nemo, Marlin. Initially, back in 2005 Disney in the midst of
their protracted snit with Steve Jobs had decided to farm out the sequel to a subsidiary;
but in 2013 it was to be time for Pixar magic once again. The release date was
pushed back from the fall of 2015 to the summer of 2016. Now, the only question
is, could Pixar duplicate the magic they accomplished with another sequel, “Toy
Story 2” (1999), i.e. a sequel superior to its progenitor? Well, in the words
of my granddaughters and adult daughter: “yes”!
Yes, to be absolutely certain, “Finding Dory” works to
repeat the charm, poignancy and sentimentality of “Finding Nemo” and it does so
in fine fashion. Your children will laugh as my granddaughter did when the
sweet but nearsighted whale shark, Destiny (Kaitlin Olson) runs into the wall
of her tank, or when the bug-eyed Loon, Becky (unvoiced) goggles her eyes at
Marlin and pecks him on the noggin for no apparent reason. The sight gags work
great for the kids and they will have fun. There isn’t the clever two layered
topical joking of "Aladdin" where kids and adults can laugh at the same joke,
though for different reasons. But chances are you will find yourself laughing
alongside your kids, if only for the joy of their joy.
One minor problem for me as an adult, is that “Finding Dory” repeats with considerable rigor the various plot
points in “Finding Nemo”: there is a lost waif, a vicious carnivore that does
not get his way, various dark places to swim through, amusing helpers that bark
out amusing monosyllabic threats (remember “mine”, now look for “off” from
Idris Elba of all people; this is one of the adult level jokes in the movie –
see “Beast of No Nation” for a prolonged explanation of why), and of course an
ingenious escape from a trap that seems quite reasonably impossible to adult human
eyes to escape from. So, yes, the plot worked the first time for its cleverness
and sentimentality, and it works here, too for the same reasons, but it is a
little derivative. I might have yearned for the pathos of “Up” or the wit of “Aladdin”,
but the non-stop laughter coming from my daughter and grandkids, makes such
yens quite irrelevant. “Finding Dory” may not reach the sky-high levels of
these two predecessors, but it does quite nicely equal “Finding Nemo”, and for the
kids, that is quite enough.
For the adults and their enjoyment, it is truly amazing what can be done with
computer-generated animation these days. To help prepare the adults, “Finding
Nemo” was preceded in our theater by an animated short called “Piper”. Anyone would be excused
for believing (as I did for several moments) that based on the visuals, this
short was a live action short. I could not find one single aspect of the
animation to find fault with. “Finding Dory” continues with this exceptional level of animation. “Finding
Dory” won’t be confused with live action movie the way “Piper” was due to the cartoonish depiction
of the characters being portrayed, but the underwater lighting and color of the
kelp beds is, I can assure you as a scuba diver, as close to reality as an
actual live action film might have been. It was breathtaking. Other scenes such
as those within the “Open Ocean” exhibit at the Moro Bay Marine Life Institute (where
the bulk of the movie takes place) create their own versions of breath taking
animation. These parts of the movie are simply remarkable. Every adult will
enjoy the movie for the visual treat it is designed to be, and is.
In terms of writing, it is clever in the way writers Andrew Stanton, Victoria Strouse and Bob Peterson intentionally write Dory, Marlin and Nemo into corners that it does not seem possible for them to extricate themselves from. But in the manner of the dentist’s aquarium in “Finding Nemo”, the writers do find clever ways that may push an adult’s credulity to its limits but it most likely merely entertains the child (and those that are children at heart). It’s time for me and the like-minded to stop being a scientist, worrying about logic (these are after all talking fish), and just go with the crazy childlike logic of an octopus fixated on getting to Cleveland. I’m there and enjoyed it, right up to the final denouement. I loved the use of the sea otters to get there, they are cute and lovable, and using them as a plot device was funny and effective in this crazy Pixar world. My only small complaint about the writing was maybe they pushed movie-land silliness a little too far with a truck-driving octopus*.
Lastly, for the adults, the closing song of Nat King Cole’s “Unforgettable” sung here by Sia will be another gift for viewers of a certain age; it is both a nostalgic and an empathic ending to the beautiful imagery and emotions they just witnessed in the movie.
Anyway, it’s a fine sequel to “Finding Nemo”. It’s a little
less witty, and perhaps does a less effective job of turning a “disability”
into a strength than it did in “Finding Nemo”, but without question your
grandkids, your adult kids, and in all probability you will love it, if only to
see old friends that are like family once again! Go see it, its summer time,
after all.*I read that following the release of the documentary “Black Fish” and its criticism of life within a Marine Exhibit, that the ending was changed away from such a final destination for our piscine heroes to one of the open ocean. Who knows, if maybe the final ending was a last minute change; to me it feels a little forced.
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