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When Will and Dory moved into their 1930s home, they didn’t expect to go viral for a scream. But a chimney cleaning gone wrong — and a squirrel on the loose — turned into a TikTok hit with ...
Finding Dory reminded me a little bit of Toy Story 2, in that a good portion of the film takes place at some sort of California-based Sea World-type establishment, just like Toy Story 2 took place ...
You’re going to cry, then laugh, then cry some more, but you'll mostly laugh while watching "Finding Dory." If you're worried that the film — centered around the titular Blue Tang — will be ...
Dory, one of the best known Pixar characters from "Finding Nemo" and "Finding Dory," can be found in coral reefs. Here's what kind of fish she is.
Dory's ocean buddies have their own challenges: Destiny has impaired vision, while Bailey struggles with echolocation; Hank deals with anxiety, and Nemo has that "lucky" undersized fin.
Dory’s parents, we learn in “Finding Dory,” never gave up hope that their daughter would find her way home to them. And in both cases, the children in question have disabilities.
The first line of Finding Dory is "Hi, I'm Dory," but it might as well be, "Awww!" That's the sound your theater will make when it gets its first glimpse of the baby blue tang fish, her big anime ...
"Finding Dory" will be released in theaters in June 2016. — -- "Finding Dory" won't be just a sequel to "Finding Nemo." Instead, it will introduce a whole host of new characters to fans ...
As 'Finding Dory' opens, the movie's co-director dives into why the blue tang is so appealing to so many. Accessibility statement Skip to main content. Democracy Dies in Darkness.
In Finding Dory, “alone,” “lost,” and “profoundly confused” feel like Dory’s rotating states of being. After a single word triggers memories of her parents, she swims toward the open ...
TikTok just keeps swimming with trends. In the newest one, the line "Hi, I'm Dory" from the 2016 animated film "Finding Dory" gets revived — but with a twist.
"Finding Dory" is not only shattering box office records.Some say the latest Disney Pixar movie is also breaking down stereotypes about the disabled, reports CBS News correspondent Reena Ninan.