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Bienvenido a la jungla urbana.
La moderna metrópoli mamífera de Zootrópolis es una ciudad absolutamente única. Está compuesta de barrios con diferentes hábitats como la lujosa Plaza Sahara, el Distrito Selva Tropical y el gélido Distrito Tundra. Es un crisol donde los animales de cada entorno conviven, un lugar donde no importa lo que seas. De hecho puedes ser cualquier cosa, desde un elefante enorme hasta la musaraña más diminuta. Pero cuando llega la optimista agente Judy Hopps, descubre que ser la primera conejita de un cuerpo policial compuesto de animales duros y enormes no es nada fácil. Pero está decidida a demostrar su valía y se mete de cabeza en un caso, a pesar de que eso significa trabajar con Nick Wilde, un zorro parlanchín y estafador, para resolver el misterio.
Avis de la communauté (11)
This movie had more jokes for adults than kids. I think a lot of the themes were probably pretty heavy for kids and tied into metaphors enough that kids didn't put up on them. But great movie just the same. The hubby & I were easily the ones laughing hardest in the theater.
This is one of the best Disney movie I've ever seen.
This movie is SO cute with a fantastic story that really had me emotionally invested in these characters. The world was really well created and there's so much depth to it that it really has me wanting to experience another story in this world. This movie is one of my favourite Disney movies of all time and I'll definitely find myself watching in the future.
All drains lead to the ocean
Zootopia is one of those films that works on every level. As pure entertainment, it is incredibly funny, fast-paced, and filled with visual details that don’t wear out after a single viewing. But it also offers something more: an intelligent message disguised as a colorful fable. And that, when seen with perspective, is what elevates it. On first watch, what stands out is its rhythm and the chemistry between Judy Hopps and Nick Wilde. The buddy-movie structure is perfectly measured: personality clashes, constant humor, and an investigation that unfolds naturally. The jokes work for both children and adults, and some gags —like the sloth scene— are already part of animation history. Visually, it is stunning. The city is built with astonishing attention to detail, each district follows its own climatic logic, and the world feels alive. It’s not just a pretty setting; it’s a coherent universe. There is a clear ambition to create something more sophisticated than a typical animal comedy. What truly makes it stand out is its social reading. Beneath its friendly surface, the film speaks about prejudice, collective fear, and manipulation. And it does so without becoming solemn. It has the intelligence to raise complex issues without overwhelming the viewer with obvious moral lessons. That makes it far more mature than it initially appears. It is also one of those films that becomes tied to family memories, to specific stages of life, to that moment when the talking toy of the protagonist had to be found because the fascination was absolute. And that is when cinema stops being just cinema. Zootopia is funny, sophisticated, and emotionally generous. Disney at its peak.