Pixar’s ‘Finding Nemo’ Could’ve Been ‘First Bad Movie’ If Not For Last-Min Scene
By Mikelle Leow, 30 Apr 2024
Image via Pixar / IMDb
Pixar—the name synonymous with animation excellence. But even this entertainment giant wasn’t immune to stumbles. Recently, animator Jason Deamer revealed a behind-the-scenes secret about the beloved 2003 film, Finding Nemo: it almost became the studio’s “first bad movie.”
Deamer, speaking to UNILAD, described how the emotional core of the story—Marlin’s desperate search for his son Nemo—was originally hidden behind flashbacks, and that audiences would learn about the death of Nemo’s mother, Coral, and Marlin’s crippling fear of the ocean through scattered scenes.
The impact would have been far more muted, and the film might have been lost at sea, had the makers stuck with the initial decision.
Deamer recounted that everyone walked out of the last screening prior to the completion of Finding Nemo “and no one was saying anything.” The silence spoke volumes, leading the team to ponder if they had just made its “first bad movie.”
Thankfully, Pixar wasn’t afraid to course-correct. Co-director Lee Unkrich spearheaded a last-minute change, moving the backstory to the film’s opening. This new structure allowed viewers to connect with Marlin’s grief and overprotectiveness from the very beginning, making his journey all the more compelling.
Unkrick’s suggestion did not require new animations; it was a matter of reordering existing footage to inform the audience of Marlin’s loss upfront. This edit transformed Marlin from an overbearing character to a deeply sympathetic figure, whose protective instincts were now rooted in a heart-wrenching loss.
Finding Nemo, with its emotional resonance and stunning animation, went on to become a critical and commercial darling with a current 99% Rotten Tomatoes score. It’s a reminder that, against the tide, we should just keep swimming.
[via GamesRadar+ and UNILAD, cover image via Pixar / IMDb]