This thread...now this is where it's at for me.
Going to be up front and say that this post will contain spoilers for the film, it's been over a year since its release so I think it's safe to assume that everyone who would ever bother to check this thread that wants to see it will have done so already.
For starters, I had my fursona comissioned as a Zootopian back in March, a piece of art I still use as my avatar even now.
What's funny about Zootopia is it actually has a fairly similar production story to that of the Lion King. Both films struggled throughout development, weren't seen as being as marketable as a more traditional Disney film/property (for Lion King it was Pocahontas and for Zootopia it was Moana) were seen as being on the B list and weren't expected by the higher ups to be succesful, with both films stealing the commercial and critical thunder from the film on the A List. I guess it's true when they say that those who do not learn from history are doomed to repeat it.
I absolutley adore this film, in the year and several months since its release it's become my favourite film. I love it to such a degree that I think I've occasionally annoyed a few friends of mine with how intense my fandom is for it. But what can you do?
I didn't follow this film much or even at all during its development. All my hopes and dreams were riding on the Ratchet and Clank film being the first truly great video game to film adaptation (and we all know how that turned out...
) and it was only in the weeks leading up to its release that a friend of mine who'd been hyped about it for a long time as well as YouTube film critic Chris Stuckmann uploaded a glowing yet extremely surprised in tone review that got my curiosity piqued pick time.
We had to wait several weeks for the film here in the UK (where it's known as "Zootropolis". Yeah, I just call it Zootopia xD) but I went to an advance screening with some friends. If only I'd known what I was getting myself into that day, since that ended up being the first of many times I ventured to the cinema to see it =P I ended up knowing it more or less word for word before it was out on blu ray even in the United States.
To go over the films I love about this film, I'll start with the relationship and chemistry the two main leads share. They have such natural chemistry that them ending up as an item by the end wouldn't have felt contrived, as it does in some other films where the leads up together. But the story let them become best friends first, and even that progression was gradual and well written.
A lot of films would have had them become best buddies after Nick opens up to Judy and tells her about his past during the gondola ride...but not Zootopia. After spending most of his life shielding how he feels from people with a "smug shield" things like that don't just erase themselves after one candid conversation and Zootopia displays that perfectly, they don't become best friends until the bridge scene later on.
Also the way they do a lot of their communication through humour. A shared sense of humour is an important aspect to any relationship and Nick and Judy have this in spades. So many of their exchanges are extremely quoteable and delivered masterfully by Jason Bateman and Ginnifer Goodwin. The fact the stars aligned and they were able to record face to face clearly paid off in this regard.
Then there's the useage of animals to talk about social issues. The thing I adore about this aspect of the film is that no group (be it Predators, Prey or any of the specific species in either category) are made out to be the good or bad guys. All are more or less equally capable of partaking in or being on the recieving end of bias. Naturally some individual characters such as Bellwether are clearly antagonistic but are treated as bad apples rather than (please don't hurt me for this D:) the hyenas in The Lion King which are all inheriently evil.
Judy is clearly a victim of bias when she first joins the ZPD for being a bunny. Too small, too dumb, should just stick to being a farmer, she gets stuck with meter maid duty simply for being a bunny and has to risk getting fired whilst standing up to Bogo in order to get the chance she so dearly needs. Of course Bogo's reaction is understandable, he's only ever known the ZPD (Or at least Precinct One, at the very least) has a department ran by buffalo, lions, rhinos, hippos and other such large mammals. These sort of outlooks don't just change overnight and not to mention, Judy is merely an exceptional bunny and doesn't cause an influx of smaller mammals to join the acadamy "just because" a touch which I really appreciated.
But then, when Judy conducts the press conference and says in summary that predators are biologically prone to being savages, theorising extremely dangerous and false information on the biggest stage of her career it becomes clear that she's not above certain biases herself. We know she has a "thing" about foxes because of Gideon shoving and scratching her when she was a kit, but nonetheless she's sub conciously scared of Nick even after everything they've gone through, so while not done purposefully she is every bit as "speciesist" (I really hate when people say this film is just about race and not bias in general) as those who've pre judged her. A fact she comes clean about in the bridge scene.
Then there's the world building. The Art Book, Handbook and Imagining Zootopia documentary (plus the assorted bonus features on the blu ray) really highlight just how much thought went into building this city. It really feels like it truly was designed by animals, from the artifical weather systems to touches like the three differently sized stores on the Zootopia Express and presumably other means of public transportation, to little tubes for rodents to safely traverse the streets when outside the walls of Little Rodentia...it goes on and on.
Though the premise and feel of the city are contemporary, the actual logistics behind it are very science fiction esque (right down to the mammals evolving to walk on two legs and becoming sentient without any human intervention) and while I know it will never happen, I would pay good money to watch or read a detailed prequel that spilled all the juicy little details on how this all came to be.
I'm eagerly awaiting confirmation of a sequel (hoping it's the unnanounced 2021 Disney Animation film) or some other kind of follow up. The characters and world are too rich to not be revisited some years down the line.
I think I'll stop now as I've typed a full blown essay of a post
But if not in this thread, then where else? =P