.Review: ‘Finding Dory’

Nemo, Marlon join the ditzy blue tang on another undersea adventure.

DITZY FISH: Everybody’s favorite scatterbrained tang is back and searching for her long-lost parents in ‘Finding Dory.’

As its opening act, this Finding Nemo sequel features a Pixar short called “Piper.” The film is about a baby sandpiper coping with incoming tide. It’s so small and perfect that it makes what follows look sprawling. Otherwise, Finding Dory is a better film than its predecessor, with more narrative sophistication.

It’s an aquatic Memento, as the memory-challenged blue tang Dory (Ellen Degeneres does the addled fish’s voice) retrieves forgotten images of her childhood. She seeks her long-lost parents off the coast of Morro Bay with an ever-worried Nemo and Marlon (voiced by Albert Brooks) in pursuit. Brooks’ job is to give the movie some salt, and maybe his best line comes with his frustration at the dithering Dory in a tank full of identical fish, seeking her mom and dad: “She should just pick two!”

What makes Pixar great is the way it always casts shadows behind its polychrome colors, contrasting a child’s conflicted urges for safety and adventure. The reefs are a riot of tropically colored corals and anemones, but the ocean now is dirtier, lined with more scrap and wreckage, and Dory gets netted in a set of plastic six-pack rings.

In the contrast of Dory’s memory deficit and her difficulties as a young fish, one sees the plight of a generation, bracketed between children with learning disorders and their elders whose memories are slipping away. The poignancy should be even greater, but appealing as she is, Degeneres is more like a trusted brand than an actress.

There are mercifully few fish-puns in the script: the young Dory is called “Kelpcake” and a character exclaims “Holy carp!” But new characters speed the tale up to a terrific action movie climax along a coastal highway, with the aid of too-cute otters and a deranged coot who carries the cast in a skybucket full of water.

Studies of the intelligence and ingenuity of octopuses are born out in Finding Dory’s most dynamic character, an shapeshifting cephalopod named Hank (Ed O’Neill) who just wants to retreat from the ocean—”I have bad memories of that place”—to a nice safe aquarium in Cleveland. A master of disguise and escape, Hank may make octopus sushi too sad to eat, in the same way that Bambi made venison tragic.

Finding Dory
PG; 105 Mins.
Valleywide

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Latest Giveaways

Enter for a chance to win a Car Pass to Christmas in the Park Drive Thru Light Show at History Park in San Jose. Drawing November 20, 2024.
Enter for a chance to win a 4-Pack of tickets to the Exploratorium at Pier 15 in San Francisco. Drawing January 8, 2025.
spot_img
10,828FansLike
8,305FollowersFollow
Metro Silicon Valley E-edition Metro Silicon Valley E-edition