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"Dim don't wanna go."
—Dim to Flik

Dim is one of the characters in A Bug's Life.

A Bug's Life[]

Dim is a rhinoceros beetle that plays the "ferocious beast" in the circus with a childlike nature, as seen when he sobs in pain after Rosie accidentally lashes one of his feet. He is also shown to be ticklish when some ant kids unintentionally tickle his thorax with their antennae while exploring beneath him. He is usually mothered by the black widow spider, Rosie. He is easily the heaviest insect in the circus troupe, and also the transport to Heimlich, Rosie, Tuck and Roll. He is big and strong but kind of cowardly like when Thud the Horsefly scares his friends (although because Thud maybe was even bigger than Dim).

When the Circus Bugs perform their magic act in front of Hopper, Dim provides refuge for the Queen when she is made to look like she is put into the Chinese Cabinet. Dim also helps Dot scare the evil grasshopper Thumper away. When the ants load Hopper into the circus cannon, Dim jumps onto the cannon, ready to blast Hopper away, but rain begins to fall before he can do so.

At the end of the film, some of the Blueberries try to hide under Dim's wings, but Rosie spots them. As the circus troupe leave the island, Dim carries the circus wagon, leaving Heimlich to be carried by Manny and Francis instead.

Trivia[]

  • Dim was Brad Garrett's first Pixar character.
  • Out of all the Circus Bugs, Dim seems to have the least number of lines throughout the film.
  • Toys of Dim and his friends can be seen at Al's Toy Barn in Toy Story 2.
  • When Dim hides the Queen under his wings, Manny mistakenly calls him a dung beetle, when he is really a rhinoceros beetle.
  • When Dim roars to help Dot scare Thumper away, his roar sounds just like the T-Rex in Jurassic Park, similar to how Rex roared in Toy Story 3 and during the "Strange Things" sequence in the original Toy Story.
  • This character design, minus his middle legs, may have been reused for Trixie in Toy Story 3.
  • Dim's horn structure wasn't meant to be reflective of a specific kind of horned beetle. However, in 2006, entomologist Brett C. Ratcliffe discovered a species of rhinoceros beetle that closely resembled Dim, which was named Megaceras briansaltini and dubbed the "Nature imitates art" coincidence as the "Dim Effect".

Gallery[]

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