In June last year, a study said many of the real-life Nemos swimming in children’s fish tanks around the world were caught using cyanide – another threat to the species. Finding Nemo, theEach fish has its own signature something that sets it apart as one of the planet’s scariest sea creatures. 9. Sheepshead. “This doesn’t look so scary!”. It will soon…. They say that the worst monster is the one you never notice. It sits there, in plain view, and one day you realize it’s absolutely terrifying.
In “Finding Nemo,” the adorable protagonist is eaten by a barracuda but his dad, Marlin survives. Nemo is the remaining baby, but gets lost and is pursued by sharks and narrowly escapes a
The user wrote: ‘At the beginning of Finding Nemo the slight crack on Nemo’s fish egg helps explain his “lucky fin”.’ Many fans of the movie will admit to having never seen the crack
As the authors of a 2009 scientific paper in the journal Sexual Development noted, “In the popular cartoon movie Finding Nemo, a male anemonefish loses his mate and must struggle alone to raise his offspring Nemo. In real life, Nemo’s father likely would have switched sex following his mate’s death, and then paired with a male.”
Usually, the more bubbly and happy the flick, the more "dark" the hypothesis is. Like the fact that Aladdin is set in a dystopian future where magic rules again after a nuclear fallout, or that the Harry Potter films are actually good (sorry, just wanted to make some Potterheads mad). This Finding Nemo theory claims to explain what the movie is