Zootropolis Review
Movies:
In
the mammal city of Zootropolis, rabbit rookie cop Judy Hopps (Goodwin)
is forced to team up with fox Nick Wilde (Bateman) when civilised
animals start turning savage.
Release Date:
25 Mar 2016
On the face of it, Zootropolis sees Walt Disney Animation Studios on safe ground. This is the Disney of Robin Hood and Mickey Mouse
— cute, anthropomorphised animals, walking on hind legs, talking up
cosy platitudes. A familiar formula ready to delight pre-teens and be
packaged for enthusiastic toy merchandisers.
It remains entertaining throughout, testament to its inventiveness - and Pixar’s influence.
But Zootropolis has more in common with Pixar
than it first appears. The fictional universe it presents — a human-free
world where mammals have evolved into a bustling, civilised society —
is vividly realised, richly detailed and very funny.
Our guide through this world is Judy Hopps (voiced by Ginnifer
Goodwin), a bunny cop in a buddy-cop movie, paired with a mismatched
partner — a fox. Hopps is very much a Disney heroine for a post-Frozen
world — peppy and independently minded. Despite the urges of her
carrot-farming parents to give up her dreams, she becomes Zootropolis’
first rabbit police officer. Her partner, Nick Wilde, is a wily hustler
played with sarcastic relish by Jason Bateman. In the wild, they’re
enemies; here they form an uneasy partnership as they’re both assigned
to a missing-animals case.
In the grand tradition of the genre, the mismatched pair gradually learn
to get along. What they uncover — a this-goes-all-the way-to-the-top
conspiracy — raises questions over what it means to evolve past your
biology; in a city where former bestial foes share an uncomfortable
truce, it serves as a smart analogy for the debates on immigration that
rage in our human world. It’s not a domain into which you often see
Disney venture.
Of course, political metaphors will bypass the youngsters and yet the
twisty machinations of the noir-lite story sometimes get lost among the
furry shenanigans. This means, for adults, the joy is often to be found
in the background: beavers as construction workers; sloths working the
desks at the Department Of Motor Vehicles; Shakira as a gazelle. But it
remains entertaining throughout — a testament to the inventiveness of
the on-screen action. And Pixar’s influence.
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