1. Kessie says:

    Ah, you nailed down what vaguely unsettled me about that movie. I just couldn’t figure out what it was. That gazelle chick is the high priest of acceptance and tolerance. That was the meta narrative–tolerance–even for prey and predators. Intolerance of different animals was a horrible evil.

  2. Good points — I hadn’t noticed that second, negative aspect of the movie either of the two times I saw it, but you make a good point about the mixed message.

    However, I would argue that there is real evil in the movie, in the form of the [no spoilers here] villain and their accomplices, and that their evil is not healed or redeemed by the “let’s keep trying and have no fear” message but is punished with arrest and imprisonment. So there is a final judgment, so to speak, even if it’s the kind of watered-down form of earthly justice that assumes a Law and a moral code without having any philosophical basis for it.

    I also didn’t get the impression that Gazelle’s “why can’t we all just love each other” speech to the media and her hip-shaking pop tunes were actually affecting the outcome of the plot or suggesting that pop culture will save us. Nick and Judy saved the day by exposing the villain’s scheme; Gazelle’s appearances were just window dressing (and, thanks to the app, part of a running joke). That’s not to say that the movie offers any better solution to the problem of evil than “loving the same things will bring us all together,” but that’s by no means a specifically Zootopian problem….

    • I agree the Gazelle inspirational speech and “paradise” concert didn’t affect the outcome. But they did represent the untarnished ideal as contrasted with the “fear of the public” problem. In other words, the problem is limited to the news media and people in general. But popular culture songs and performers are Socially Conscious. I would dislike this simplicity if it were a pastor it spiritual leader playing a similar “icon” role.

      • Ah, I see. If Gazelle had been among the “prey” animals who expressed fear about their future, or if there were more than one pop culture icon represented in the film, the picture would look very different, agreed.

What do you think?