The Star Malaysia - Star2

A fishy tale

- By CHRISTI CARRAS

THE prequel to Finding Nemo and Finding Dory should be called Finding Ellen Degeneres.

In conversati­on with film critic Justin Chang recently, Finding Nemo mastermind Andrew Stanton revealed that the franchise’s beloved blue tang with shortterm memory loss was almost a male fish – until he discovered Degeneres.

Chang had a virtual sit-down with the writer-director as part of The Times’ #Ultimatesu­mmermovies­howdown, which saw Finding Nemo claim the Week 5 crown over 15 other blockbuste­r contenders including Big, Poltergeis­t, Sister Act, Wonder Woman, fellow Pixar phenom Up and runner-up Harry Potter And The Prisoner Of Azkaban.

“To be honest, I had this really dumb, male, naive view that the guide that should take the father through should be a male fish,” Stanton told Chang. “And it just didn’t work for about six months to a year.”

Enter Degeneres who surfaced on Stanton’s radar while his wife was watching the comedian on TV.

“I heard (Degeneres) change the sentence – the subject of a sentence – five times before she got from beginning to the end,” Stanton said. “And a light bulb went off that was an appealing, progressiv­e way to be able to do short-term memory that wouldn’t get old really quick.

“And then I couldn’t get her ... voice out of my head, and suddenly all the writer’s block I had just unloaded. And then I started to think, ‘Well, why not? Why can’t it be a female? And why can’t it be a platonic relationsh­ip?”

The 2003 fish film follows a sprightly

Dory and an uptight clownfish named Marlin (voiced by Albert Brooks) as they “just keep swimming” through the ocean on a desperate mission to locate the latter’s missing son, Nemo.

As Chang previously noted: “Marlin may fail in the dad-joke department, but he is neverthele­ss the ultimate helicopter parent. As such, he’s pretty obnoxious a lot of the time – but also more relatable than I care to admit.”

For Stanton, that layered father-son relationsh­ip was “the last jigsaw puzzle piece that really put it all together”.

“I was at this place where I was a father of a newborn, but my dad was still very much alive and very healthy. And I felt like I was in the middle of a telescope,” Stanton said.

“I could see back in time, as equally as I could see forward in time, to being a son and a father . ... That’s always the best place to be as a writer . ... You almost are compelled to try to express this thing you’re going through.”

With Nemo on a separate path throughout most of the film, Stanton described the innocent and childlike Dory as the “surrogate child” who forces Marlin to evolve as a parent by the time he (spoiler!) reunites with his son at the end of the story.

“My whole goal here is to make this character – my main character – a better father, and I don’t have the son with him through the entire movie. How do I work on him?” Stanton said.

“That’s when the movie went from a funny situation to a deep movie that we could really, really take advantage of. And I can’t say all came in one moment.” – Los Angeles Times/tribune News Service

 ??  ?? dory the blue tang from Finding Nemo was almost a male fish ... then comedian degeneres arrived. — Handout
dory the blue tang from Finding Nemo was almost a male fish ... then comedian degeneres arrived. — Handout

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