9 curiosities you didn't know about Finding Nemo

in #movies7 years ago

Finding Nemo is an animated film that was directed by Pixar studios; Saw the light in 2003 and won several awards as an Oscar for "Best Animated Film" in that same year.

An announced death

The creators of the film did not plan to show the sequence when Nemo's mother was swallowed by a barracuda, if not a little easier, but it was decided that she had to show why Marlin is an overprotective parent and this moment explains why her attitude

All have a name

In the animation tapes it is necessary that each character has a name so that the models can be identified, they had to baptize each fish.

Toy Story

As proof of the familiarity between Pixar tapes, in Searching for Nemo, in the dentist's office, to be precise, highlights Buzz Lightyear, who is among the doctor's toys.

Mr. Incredible

Buzz is not the only one who sneaks into the tape, so does the father of Los Increibles, who appears on the cover of a comic book that is reading one of the patients waiting their turn with the dentist.

Shark

Bruce, the vegetarian shark in history, owes its name to the mechanical shark model that Steven Spielberg used for his film Shark (1975). And remember, "fish are friends, not food."

Blood

Finding Nemo is the first Pixar film to show blood. Yes, it was all thanks to the moment that 'Dory' bleeds from the nose

Tiki

In the fishbowl in which Nemo tries to escape, there are three tiki figurines, which turn out to be nothing more and nothing less than three Pixar workers: Peter Sohn, Nelson Bohol and Ricky Nierva; Those who posed with their best face for the photo.

Beating records

As part of the work of Pixar, the details are very important, that's why all the pelicans that appear on the tape, total 361,975 feathers; The turtles we see swimming are 200 and the bank of jellyfish that 'Marlin' and 'Dory' have to cross has 74 thousand 472 pieces that look like gelatin.

The most sold

When finding nemo was released on DVD in 2006, it sold more than 8 million copies on its first day, becoming the best-selling DVD of all time.