Finding Dory Trailer As If It Was Written By Game Of Thrones' George R.R. Martin

If you're a parent, there's a good chance you've fantasized about the characters in that [...]

If you're a parent, there's a good chance you've fantasized about the characters in that children's movie that you're watching for the millionth time all dying in a fire.

Now, those dreams can become a twisted reality! The internet is full of people who love mash-ups, and this one brings together the brutality of writer George R. R. Martin and the...ahh...fish? of Finding Dory, Pixar's latest sequel, out in theaters this weekend.

You can check it out above. The video uses footage from Finding Nemo and Finding Dory, along with audio from those films and other sources I can't quite identify. Chime in below if you have any idea.

...And, yeah, a fair amount of footage, both from the films and manipulated digitally.

Disney-Pixar's Finding Dory reunites everyone's favorite forgetful blue tang, Dory, with her friends Nemo and Marlin on a search for answers about her past. What can she remember? Who are her parents? And where did she learn to speak Whale?

Directed by Andrew Stanton and produced by Lindsey Collins, the film features the voices of Ellen DeGeneres, Albert Brooks, Ed O'Neill, Kaitlin Olson, Ty Burrell, Eugene Levy and Diane Keaton.

The film is in theaters this weekend, and is expected to earn $140 million from Friday to Sunday -- the largest opening-weekend haul ever for an animated film.

Finding Nemo director Andrew Stanton, who returns for the sequel, is likely breathing a sigh of relief at these numbers; his last job as a director was John Carter, which lost Disney around $200 million in spite of building a pretty solid following among audiences who saw it.

Currently, Disney holds three of the year's top five spots at the domestic box office with Civil War, Zootopia, and The Jungle Book. They've also got a stake in Fox's Deadpool, since that's a Marvel property. If Finding Dory ousts Batman V Superman from the top spot before something else creeps in, Disney could potentially have a financial stake in all five of the year's top films.