I can’t see the funny side of scaring Gerald away of him being made so unwelcome. It’s not recognised and we are given poor role models for how to treat each other. I think I am seeing how invisible and insidious bullying is. I am dismayed that Disney Pixar are so unconcerned about Gerald’s plight that they sell a t-shirt illustrating the incident.Īs if it is not enough to side with the bullies and bullying is also marketed. What you can do is humiliate Gerald further by buying a t-shirt depicting the incident. In the movie the bullies are not called out, not by a friendly fish or a good-hearted octopus. It is supposed to be funny, and as we know a classic defense offered by a bully is that they were joking, they didn’t mean it… Their barking has the desired effect and Gerald tumbles off the rock backward, falling into the ocean. Rudder and Fluke continued to yell scaring Gerald away. “Gerald! Get off the rock! Off! Off! Off! Off! Off!” Fluke barked. Suddenly a skinny sea-lion with a green bucket in his mouth appeared behind them giggling and creeping up the rock. In the movie, this is sufficient for him to become an object of ridicule – and an unwelcome presence on the sea lion rock.Ī scene involving Fluke, Rudder, and Gerald is plays out like this: He is smaller than the other sea lions, and he giggles without cause. His jaunty eccentricity makes him stand out, his individuality should be endearing but, apparently, is not. He is gifted with a sense of style and wears a little green bucket on his head. They lazily loll about laughing and snoring. Finding Dory features two amiable looking sea lions, Fluke and Rudder. The sit on a rock in the ocean. I want to take issue with Finding Dory, the sequel to the Pixar movie Finding Nemo. The obvious one being the potentially overwhelming affect on the bullied and right now I am referring to the problem of seeing the act of bullying for what it is.
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