A warm, funny, and genuinely thrilling family adventure that pairs Pixar’s visual invention with a strong emotional core. It works as both a kid-friendly quest and a surprisingly effective story about anxiety, trust, and letting go.
89% ★★★★☆ (3,387,823)
Finding Nemo
Where to watch: Disney
Movie · Animation · Family · G
2003 · 1h 40m · ★ 89% (3.4M)
There are 3.7 trillion fish in the ocean. They're looking for one.
Director: Andrew Stanton
Starring: Albert Brooks, Ellen DeGeneres, Alexander Gould
Overview
Nemo, an adventurous young clownfish, is unexpectedly taken from his Great Barrier Reef home to a dentist's office aquarium. It's up to his worrisome father Marlin and a friendly but forgetful fish Dory to bring Nemo home -- meeting vegetarian sharks, surfer dude turtles, hypnotic jellyfish, hungry seagulls, and more along the way.
Director
Andrew Stanton
Production
Pixar
Cast
Albert Brooks, Ellen DeGeneres, Alexander Gould, Willem Dafoe, Geoffrey Rush, Brad Garrett, Allison Janney, Austin Pendleton, Stephen Root, Vicki Lewis, Joe Ranft, Andrew Stanton, Elizabeth Perkins, Nicholas Bird, Bob Peterson, Barry Humphries, Eric Bana, Bruce Spence, Bill Hunter, LuLu Ebeling
Where to watch
Disney Plus, Hulu
Curator Review
Verdict
A warm, funny, and genuinely thrilling family adventure that pairs Pixar’s visual invention with a strong emotional core. It works as both a kid-friendly quest and a surprisingly effective story about anxiety, trust, and letting go.
Best for
families looking for a crowd-pleasing adventure
viewers who like emotional animated films with big set pieces
fans of buddy-road-trip stories
people who enjoy underwater worlds and creature comedy
Skip if
you want a purely light, low-stakes children’s movie
you dislike sentimental father-child stories
you prefer dialogue-driven animation over action and spectacle
Overview
Finding Nemo is one of those animated films that feels effortless while doing a lot at once. It’s a rescue adventure, a comedy of mismatched travel companions, and a portrait of a parent learning that love can become control when fear takes over. The movie’s structure is simple, but the pacing is so confident that every detour feels like part of the journey rather than a diversion from it.
Worth noting
The underwater world is still remarkable: bright, tactile, and full of movement, with each new location offering a different comic rhythm or visual surprise. The film has a strong sense of scale, from the intimacy of the reef to the chaos of the open ocean and the aquarium. It also benefits from a cast of characters who are instantly legible and memorable, especially in the way humor and warmth are balanced.
Bottom line
What gives it staying power is that it never forgets the emotional stakes. The movie is funny and adventurous, but it’s also about fear, independence, and the difficult work of trusting someone you love. That combination makes it easy to recommend to kids and adults alike, and it remains one of the most complete examples of mainstream family animation at its best.
Top Letterboxd reviews
mia lee vicino (4.5★) · 6504 likes
i miss when pixar movies were 75% singular adventure, 25% sentimental message instead of the other way around
ConnorEatsPants (4★) · 2870 likes
everyone turning against me on Letterboxd lately. a guy can’t go against the grain anymore. But Nemo did. Nemo swam against the current when no one else would.
Alex IHE (4★) · 2434 likes
No 1 Dreamworks Fan Note: It’s hysterical that shark tale came out a year after this movie
alor (5★) · 2289 likes
i want to be like Crush the sea turtle when i grow up