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Zootropolis 2 Review: Just-About-Passable Family Comedy Sequel Might As Well Be AI Generated
The Guardian
SKIPPED
Details
- Date Published
- 24 Nov 2025
- Priority Score
- 0
- Australian
- No
- Created
- 26 Nov 2025, 11:16 am
Authors (1)
- Peter BradshawENRICHED
Description
Follow-up to 2016 animation about talking animals living in a utopia is a soulless film-by-numbers affair filled with corporately approved jokes
Summary
The review of 'Zootropolis 2' critiques the film as a lackluster sequel that feels algorithmically generated, with humor that seems corporately approved. While it touches on the notion of AI generation metaphorically, the article does not delve into AI policy or safety issues. The film's plot, centered around talking animals in a utopian society, lacks the depth and originality of its predecessor. This article primarily serves as a cultural commentary and does not substantially contribute to discussions on AI safety or governance.
Body
Algorithmically generated and corporately approved laughs … Zootropolis 2.Photograph: Disney Enterprises/PAView image in fullscreenAlgorithmically generated and corporately approved laughs … Zootropolis 2.Photograph: Disney Enterprises/PAReviewZootropolis 2 review – just-about-passable family comedy sequel might as well be AI generatedFollow-up to 2016 animation about talking animals living in a utopia is a soulless film-by-numbers affair filled with corporately approved jokesAnother day, another supremely competent, passably-but-not-overwhelmingly funny digitally animated family comedy featuring talking animals. It’s not AI, but it might as well be. This is Zootropolis 2, which is named Zootopia 2 on its home turf in the US. (Is the reference to lefty ideas such as “utopia” too dangerous for the all-important foreign territories?) If this is the second in what promises to be a continuing series, perhaps Z3 will be cautiously hailed as a return to the franchise’s “dark” roots.We are back in the magical wonderland of Zootropolis, in which all animals live together, big and small, prey and predator; a place, in fact, where the comedy lion can lie down with the hilarious back-talking lamb, and all the animals provide undemanding voiceover work for comedy talent such as Alan Tudyk, who makes a minor vocal appearance. As before, our heroes are an odd couple of cops in the ZPD or Zootropolis Police Department: idealistic young rabbit Judy Hopps (geddit?), voiced by Ginnifer Goodwin, and sly fox Nick Wilde, voiced byJason Bateman, a creature once on the wrong side of the law but now a supposedly reformed character who has joined the police.Together, Hopps and Wilde must tackle an apparent crime by a snake, the one kind of animal not welcome in Zootropolis. This serpent has apparently stolen a journal belonging to the aristocratic family of lynxes who are the city’s founding fathers, a journal that details the creation of the “weather walls” that provide for so many different climates within the city, allowing different animals to live there. But their investigation uncovers secrets, lies and a conspiracy which goes, of course, to the very top.There are a few laughs in Z2: of course there are. But they are algorithmically generated and corporately approved. It’s the kind of movie you put on an iPad to keep the children quiet on a long plane or train journey; nothing wrong with that of course, but the heart and soul are lacking.skip past newsletter promotionafter newsletter promotionExplore more on these topicsFilmAnimation in filmFamily filmsZootopia (aka Zootropolis)Walt Disney CompanyJason BatemanreviewsShareReuse this content