Ask Hollywood. The somewhat enigmatic ( one-man-against The World) type character has been modified by Hollywood into a less edgy, admittedly unique and well not quite Henry Fonda, but less of the maverick Sub Commander. There are several films on Nemo, or where is is a lead character- and one of them ( Captain Nemo and the Underwater City) owes little to Verne and much more to some of the varied Atlantis novels. It is very similar to Scarlet Empire and the sunken city ( or realm)_ 2 different novels. Up to a point the picture shows a somewhat communistic ( wihout the name) society literally Underwater and with restricted access- and egress. the Commissar- oops, Captain Nemo aims at maintaining the secrecy of his domain at all costs. This is similar to the mildly dystopic Scarlet Empire ( written before the Russian revolution, by the way) and the other novel- where a US sub accidentally finds its way to Atlantis. In both stories- the ending is tragic, the sub inadvertently cracked the super-glass coatings of the dome ( on entry in the Sunken City, forgive me If I have the wrong title) and accidentally in Scarlet Empire- a character ( in a submarine) fires a torpedo at a sea-monster, it misses the monster, hits the dome ( not far from Coney Island, by the way) and good-Bye Atlantis. The ambiguous ending of (Captain Nemo and the Underwater city seems to suggest the escaping submariners may have slightly damaged the structure on exit- but not fatally. Having the whole thing blow up once out of ( shock damage) range would be too much ( Collateral Damage) for a G-type Science Fiction film, but one wonders. The Temple Mir management used various diversions such as Dance floors, Swimming Pools, and a sort of aquatic Olympics called ( All-Seas Day) to placate the captive residents, Naturally Captain Nemo, in full dress, attended the latter ( you, know, like the guy from Berlin at the Olympics. Some interesting social commentary, just a little bitter.
Nemo dies of a mysterious unknown illness in the sequel to, "Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea", "The Mysterious Island". Although in the first book his fate is left unknown and it is hinted that he may have died in a maelstrom, he reappears at the end of Verne's sequel to the book only to die soon after.
Verne does not say for certain. It is revealed in his sequel to "Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea", "The Mysterious Island", that Nemo's real name s Prince Andre Dakkar and that he lost everything because of a war between India and Britian. It does not say whether his family was killed or they were separated.
No, He was a crysis. (Generally a static).
Captain Nemo character creator is Jules Verne who is a French science fiction author. He wrote two novels where Captain Nemo character has appeared those are: Twenty Thousand League Under the Sea and The Mysterious Island.
Its finding nemo not nemo. and a character is nemo.
It came from the word anemone ('a nemo') which was also his home. It also came from the character Captain Nemo.
No, Nemo from the film finding Nemo is not real.Neither is Captain Nemo from Jules Verne's 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea.
Marlin (Nemo's dad), Coral (Nemo's mom) and Nemo
Captain Nemo character creator is Jules Verne who is a French science fiction author. He wrote two novels where Captain Nemo character has appeared those are: Twenty Thousand League Under the Sea and The Mysterious Island.
The Captain of the submarine Nautilus in Jules Verne's book 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea
Its finding nemo not nemo. and a character is nemo.
Captain Nemo was the skipper of the Nautilus, the submarine featured in Jules Verne's novel "Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea." Nemo is a mysterious and enigmatic character who uses the Nautilus to roam the depths of the ocean.
Captain Nemo was created in 1870.
It came from the word anemone ('a nemo') which was also his home. It also came from the character Captain Nemo.
== == Nemo is a latin name meaning "no one" or "no man". Nemo is a Disney Pixar character. He is a clownfish and he appears in Disney Pixar's Finding Nemo. Nemo is the name given by the captain of the Nautilus in Jules Verne's 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea.
The duration of The Return of Captain Nemo is 1.7 hours.
The Return of Captain Nemo was created on 1978-03-08.
Nemo
Captain Nemo was the captain in Jules Verne's book "20,000 Leagues Under the Sea." Nemo is the mysterious and enigmatic captain of the futuristic submarine called the Nautilus.
A dynamic character.