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Every Pixar Movie, Ranked Worst To Best

With the release of Inside Out over the weekend, and the collective agreement that Pixar "is back," it's easy to begin wondering where the studio's newest animated flick sits amongst the rest of its pantheon of classics. We Got This Covered tasked me with updating its ranking of the now-15-film-strong studio to see where the movies of the legendary Disney-owned animation warehouse sit next to one another.
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4) Finding Nemo (2003)

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Overplayed and over-referenced in the subsequent decade following its mid-2003 premiere, many shrink in fear of applauding Finding Nemo for its strengths after watching it on ABC Family for the zillionth time. But, here’s the simple truth: Andrew Stanton’s classic is a game changer, and no amount of basic cable re-runs can alter that.

The casting is maybe Pixar’s best, seamlessly matching each cartoon to its ridiculously on-point celebrity personality: Ellen DeGeneres’ quirky Dory and Albert Brooks’ worry-wart Marlin, especially. The flick — packed with shock-to-the-system messages for adults to trust their tykes and, in turn, for kids to learn to fend for themselves — is also one of Pixar’s best plotted, Marlin and Dory’s hijinks ebbing and flowing hypnotically from one to the next with humorous interludes to Nemo’s Dentist-office captivity balancing out the quest.

Not to mention, to every child across the planet — and some adults — any orange fish with stripes is a “Nemo” and any vaguely blue-hued one a “Dory.” Perhaps not the best support for the healthy understanding of sea creatures, Finding Nemo is so ingrained in our collective subconscious — maybe more so than any of Pixar’s works — that it becomes easy to dispense with and overlook and forget how monumentally mind-blowing a continuous 100-or-so minutes were to each of us back in the Summer of 2003.


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