Zootopia, Box Office
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Judy Hopps (Ginnifer Goodwin) and Nick Wilde’s (Jason Bateman) latest adventure involves a new case with snakes and lynxes in Disney’s Zootopia 2. Arriving nearly ten years after the first film came out,
"Zootopia 2," the sequel to Disney’s 2016 animated hit, follows the return of Judy Hopps and Nick Wilde alongside new characters.
Zootopia 2 has elephant-sized shoes to fill after the success of the first film, and thankfully, it continues to thoughtfully develop its social commentary on racism and oppression, taking it to new heights in an even more fitting allegory that focuses on a specific species rather than a concept as broad as prey and predator.
Judy Hopps and Nick Wilde re-evaluate their platon-ish relationship – with policing as a means of creating positive change in the world
A sequel to the 2016 hit, this movie about an animal metropolis takes on an even messier social allegory than the first one, while building out a wider (if bloated) universe.
Very little has changed in the two years since I wrote a piece here at ScreenCrush that pleaded with the Hollywood studios to release more family films. Prior to last weekend, when we saw Wicked: For Good,
The long-awaited follow-up to the 2016 Oscar-winning animated hit about a rabbit-fox police partnership also features Idris Elba, Quinta Brunson and Ke Huy Quan in a sprawling voice cast.
Zootopia 2 is eyeing a 5-day $270 million global opening at the box office, looking to be the second best start at Thanksgiving domestic box office.
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‘Zootopia 2’ traffics in real-world ideas — even if they’re covered with fur or snake scales
A crime-fighting fox and rabbit return, still cops on the beat, but their turf has new tensions, many of which certain older members in the audience will recognize.
While Nick Wilde and Judy Hopps are a lightning-in-a-bottle duo, Zootopia 2 introduces a whole crop of new characters that can help expand Disney's franchise.