By JAKE COYLE || AP NEWS
The original βZootopiaβ was a minor miracle. Here was a Disney animated film that took themes of race and prejudice and managed to make a sensitive-to-all-sides tale, anthropomorphize it and, as a bonus, sneak in a Department of Motor Vehicles sloth gag that the DMV is still wincing from.
A sequel coming almost a decade later, βZootopia 2β isnβt as good. Itβs a more timid and tame movie that leans largely on the (still winning) duo of Judy Hopps (Ginnifer Goodwin) and the small-time hustler fox Nick Wilde ( Jason Bateman ). Both are now out-to-prove-themselves rookies on the police force, nicknamed βthe fuzz.β
Nobody would call the original βZootopiaβ an especially biting satire. But, still, the sequel is a little toothless β not just Nickβs move from con man to cop but throughout the metropolis. Nickβs baby-posing partner in crime, the fennec fox Finnick (Tommy Lister Jr., who died in 2020), is only briefly seen. Missing entirely is anyone like Tommy Chongβs nudist stoner yak. A hint of gentrification, you might say, has swept over Zootopia.
So βZootopia 2,β directed by Jared Bush and Byron Howard (both veterans from the first film), is, like many long-in-coming sequels, a slightly watered down version of what came before. But the central relationship of Judy and Nick, a team-up with some echoes of β48 Hours,β remains a compelling one, and the primary reason that βZootopia 2β will be plenty satisfying to families seeking more cartoony lions and tigers and bears (oh my) this November. It looks great, itβs mildly funny and animal cities are fun.
Thatβs particularly because of Batemanβs fox. For an actor with a long list of credits, it might sound odd to say, but Nick Wilde is Batemanβs best movie role. A sly, sarcastic but secretly sweet canine in a loose tie is so squarely in Batemanβs wheelhouse. No one can better draw out a line about making a rug from the fur off a skunkβs butt, and I mean that as a high compliment.
Out to prove themselves as detectives, Judy and Nick cause widespread damage through the city chasing a criminal, leading Idris Elbaβs surly cape buffalo Police Chief Bogo to order them into a therapy session for dysfunctional partners. (Other members include an elephant and mouse duo.)
Acknowledging and talking through differences is the running theme, which dovetails with a plot that goes to the roots of Zootopia. Snakes, we learn, arenβt allowed in the city. As Zootopia prepares for its centennial celebration, Judy uncovers some clues that suggest a snake infiltration. But when one turns up (a cloying Ke Huy Quan as Gary DeβSnake), Judy and Nick realize that snakes arenβt so bad.
They follow a deepening conspiracy to keep out snakes that goes back to the founding of Zootopia, βChinatownβ-like. A family of Lynxes, the Lynxleys, has always taken ownership for the weather walls that divide the city into variously accommodating climates. But even one of their own, Pawbert Lynxley (Andy Samberg), suspects foul play β which, Iβm sorry to report, doesnβt include a single fowl.
But there are, to be sure, plenty of puns (Gnu Jersey, Burning Mammal) to be found, as well as a βShiningβ reference and a quick nod to βRatatouilleβ (a sequel to which is also reportedly in development). In βZootopia,β this stuff is like shooting fish in a barrel. Back is Shakira as a pop-star gazelle named β¦ Gazelle. New characters include a beaver podcaster named Nibbles Maplestick (Fortune Feimster) and a long-maned stallion mayor (Patrick Warburton). Judy and Nickβs adventures take them to a New Orleans-like reptile-friendly enclave and a snowy Tundatown.
For a movie that was in so many ways about a country mouse (bunny) coming to the big city and finding endless varieties of wildlife, both upright and shady, the βZootopiaβ sequel spends too much of its time away from its mammalian metropolis. Even Nick Wilde β no longer scheming, more in touch with his feelings β doesnβt feel quite so wild now. The fun caper spirit of the first movie is alive enough to carry Bush and Howardβs film, but you canβt help feel like sequel-ization also means domestication.
βZootopia 2,β a Walt Disney Co. release, is rated PG by the Motion Picture Association for action/violence and rude humor. Running time: 108 minutes. Two and a half stars out of four.
Source: zootopia-2-movie-review
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