![]() She never acknowledges Nemo’s fin, for instance. She never let anybody else’s struggles or flaws define her. She is the character coming into this film that never judged anyone else. I love that she just stops right then and there, after a lifetime of apologising for herself. She doesn’t apologise again after her mom says don’t you dare apologise. The fact that Dory apologies almost as an introduction to herself all the time. Lindsay: I think we treat these characters, and write them and judge them depending on the moment via our own kids. I think because I was trying to go for the truth of what Dory needed to be, universally. That was the whole point of going back in.īut I guess I kind of underestimated… I got so caught up in her first as a character, and to be very honest, I didn’t even think of how it would apply to or be recognised by children, or by a parent who had to deal with disabilities. I always knew going into the second film that that was something that needed to be addressed. In my mind, even though we never said it in the first film, she always had an apologetic, negative point of view towards her disability. But with Dory, she always had tragic underside to her.
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