![]() ![]() Available on iPhone 12 Pro, iPhone 12 Pro Max and later.Available in English (Australia, Canada, United Kingdom, U.S.) on iPhone 11 and later.Available in English (Australia, Canada, United Kingdom, U.S.) on iPhone and on AirPods Pro (2nd generation).Available on iPhone XS and iPhone XR and later and AirPods (2nd and 3rd generation), AirPods Pro (1st and 2nd generation), and AirPods Max, with the latest firmware.Available in compatible applications with AirPods (3rd generation), AirPods Pro (1st and 2nd generation), or AirPods Max with the latest firmware.Available on iPhone XS and iPhone XR and later and AirPods Pro (2nd generation) with the latest firmware.Available in English on iPhone 12 and later.English, French, and Spanish require iPhone 12 or later. Available in Arabic, Dutch, English, French, German, Hebrew, Korean, Italian, Polish, Portuguese, Romanian, Spanish, and Thai.Available on Apple Watch Series 7 or later, Apple Watch SE (2nd generation), and all Ultra models in an update later this year.Available on iPhone XS and iPhone XR and later and on Apple TV 4K (2nd generation and later).Available on iPhone 12 and later when using the front camera.Though it must be said that Dory’s courage and openness to experience also permitted the risk-averse Marlin to embrace crazy rescue-mission tactics he would otherwise never have dared to try. As they navigated the perils of the open sea beyond Marlin’s cozy home reef, he operated at a constant slow boil of very Albert Brooksian frustration over his unflaggingly cheerful sidekick’s short-term memory deficits. Dory’s breezy inability to retain new information for more than a few seconds at a time served, in the original film, primarily as a source of comic relief in contrast to the high-strung and micromanaging fish-dad Marlin (voiced by Albert Brooks). This delightful new movie’s heroine, a blue-and-gold surgeonfish voiced to perfection by Ellen DeGeneres, played a supporting (albeit crucial) role in Finding Nemo. If Finding Nemo, ostensibly the story of a widowed clownfish’s search for his missing son, was in fact a canny parable about the joys and anxieties of parenthood, its 13-years-later sequel Finding Dory explores-in Pixar’s typically whimsical, jewel-toned, sight-gag-stuffed fashion-an entirely different existential condition of adulthood: the grown-up child’s quest to reclaim and understand his or her ever-receding past. ![]()
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