Took the kids to see it and we all loved it.
Witty, funny, cute, exciting, visually stunning, engaging characters, and a very thoughtful message.
It’s exactly the kind of movie I want to show my kids.
The anti-prejudice theme, while not being in-your-face, is so overt that to not recognize it either requires willful denial or a huge social blind spot.
The best part about the way this movie delivers its message is that it doesn’t simply have one privileged group oppressing one underprivileged group, but rather a society with underlying prejudices woven throughout.
Zootopia is supposed to be a place where everyone lives in harmony and you can be whatever you want to be. The reality, as Nick knows, is that it is a society full of underlying prejudices and restrictive stereotypes.
Judy believes that Zootopia will be her chance to overcome the stereotypes that have restricted her, but it instead becomes the place where she is forced to realize that, in spite of her good intentions, she has her own prejudices that she needs to give up.
The movie does more than saying “see kids, prejudice is bad,” it says “examine your own attitudes and get rid of your own prejudices.”
I don’t think you’ll find a dictionary definition of “lazy” or “uppity” or “money-grubbing” that describes these terms as being racial slurs, either.
“Shifty,” when used to denigrate a race of people, is perhaps the perfect xenophobic word. It implies a vague and general sense of untrustworthiness without identifying a specific and refutable behavior or characteristic. It’s a shorthand way of saying “There’s something not right about them folks. They just make me feel uncomfortable.”
I love that movie, and I’m sorry your professor felt the need to take a hatchet to it.
But then, . . .
Sadly, I can’t argue with that.