Wednesday, February 24, 2016

Zootopia

DIRECTOR: Byron Howard, Rich Moore, Jared Bush LEAD CAST: Voices of Ginnifer Goodwin, Jason Bateman SCREENWRITER: Jared Bush, Phil Johnston PRODUCER: Clark Spencer EDITOR: Fabienne Rawley, Jeremy Milton MUSICAL DIRECTOR: Michael Giacchino GENRE: Animation, Action & Adventure, Comedy PRODUCTION DESIGNER: David Goetz VISUAL EFFECTS SUPERVISOR: Scott Kersavage DISTRIBUTOR: Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures LOCATION: United States RUNNING TIME: 103 minutes
Technical assessment:  4
Moral assessment:  4
CINEMA rating: V 13 (Children 13 and below with Parental Guidance)
MTRCB rating: PG
Rabbit Judy Hopps (voiced by Ginnifer Goodwin) dream of being cop, despite the discouragement from her parents who say “no bunny ever becomes a cop.” Through sheer determination and hardwork Judy attains her goal, topping her class and becoming the first bunny to join the police force. She is assigned to Zootopia, a mammal metropolis populated by animals, leaves her parents and their quiet farm life only to be given the lowest post of all—monitoring the parking meters. Disappointed but persevering she resolves to be the best parking meter cop there is, issuing 200 parking tickets before noon of her first day at work. A wily fox con artist, Nick Wilde (voice by Jason Bateman) tricks and humiliates her on Day One, but as fate would have it, both Judy and Nick become targets of a conspiracy. Circumstances teach them to work in tandem towards solving ongoing mystery crimes in Zootopia. Just when you’re about to say “What? More talking animals?”, along comes—or hops—Zootopia, another fine animation film from Disney’s menagerie. Its main asset is a meaty theme laid out through intelligent story-telling and made alive by pitch perfect voicing. Humans would easily relate to the setting, an anthropomorphic society where animals are dressed like humans and lead human lifestyles—talk about giraffes drinking latte and gazelles crooning onstage as divas—creative animation at its imaginative best. Although Zootopia would make excellent bedtime-reading for kids, it’s anything but kidstuff, what with Bryon Howard (Tangled, Bolt) and Rich Moore (Wreck-It-Ralph) at the helm, giving flesh to a script by a staff that includes Jim Reardon (WALL-E), Josie Trinidad (The Princess and the Frog) and Jennifer Lee (Frozen). Pick everything good out of those hits, toss them all into Zootopia and you’ve got film fare that’s both delectable and nutritious to go with your popcorn. If it can be called anything, Zootopia is “cartoon for adults” because it’s a strong statement on things, beliefs and attitudes we’ve taken for granted but which need reexamination in human society. It’s an honest and humorous commentary on how we let prejudice, fear, discrimination, and ignorance guide our lives and prevent us from evolving into the perfect creatures we are meant to be. With wit and gentleness it teaches us lessons on empowerment, courage to pursue our dreams, humility and diligence in performing our jobs, faith in one another despite our differences. Zootopia offers much to entertain young and old alike—the sloth episode alone is worth the price of admission, Ha, ha, ha!—but be careful which child you allow to watch it. Not all children can handle the violence on a larger-than-life screen. (The day we watched, a girl about 4-5 years old screamed when a monstrous bison clawed the fragile bunny, and then kept on crying, “No, no, no!”, burying her face in her mother’s lap and refusing to watch further. The mother and the two yayas were clueless, taking turns carrying the uncontrollable kid outside and bringing her back in until she literally lay on the floor, screaming and kicking inconsolably and spilling drinks and popcorn as a result. Literally, naglupasay! The incident, of course, disturbed the audience, but we wonder if it didn’t consist a trauma for the girl.)