Mumbai (Maharashtra) [India], November 29: It begins with a whisper — a city of mammals, walk-talking rabbits and foxes, a world of dreams, danger, and double lives. Then the doors slam shut. Zootopia 2 doesn’t try to soothe you with cotton-candy comfort. It hands you neon grit, a bigger world, and a promise: “We grew up. So did the city. Brace up.”

Nine years after the original exploded into hearts and bank accounts, the sequel lands — not with timid nostalgia, but with ambition. And ambition is a beast. It needs to be fed.

A Return More Than A Reunion

Zootopia 2 — directed by Jared Bush and Byron Howard, produced by Walt Disney Animation Studios, with a script co-written by Bush — picks up after the events of the 2016 original. Protagonists Judy Hopps (voiced by Ginnifer Goodwin) and Nick Wilde (voiced by Jason Bateman) are back. This time, their sleepy city’s undercurrents stir anew — when a mysterious reptilian newcomer, Gary De’Snake (voiced by Ke Huy Quan), slithers in, triggering panic, prejudice, and a conspiracy that reeks of old fears cloaked in new fur.

The canvas is larger: 178 characters, 67 species, and a sprawling city that feels alive — more crowded, more chaotic, more ready to betray innocence.

The music, too, carries weight: Michael Giacchino scores the film, and speaking of weight — yes, pop-star Shakira returns as Gazelle, with a fresh track “Zoo” that teases vibrancy wrapped in sharp teeth.

The Glow — And the Smoke

Zootopia 2 - PNN

What works beautifully:

  • Critics and audiences seem mostly enchanted. On Rotten Tomatoes, Zootopia 2 currently holds a strong 91% Tomatometer and 95% audience rating.

  • Fans say the film retains its core charm — the sharp social allegory beneath the fur, the mismatched detective duo, and their camaraderie. Variety-style musings turned clever commentary still land.

  • Visually, it’s a feast. The urban sprawl, neon-lit alleys, bustling marketplaces, the swamp-marsh outskirts — it’s a bigger, darker, yet vibrant world. The animation is polished, expressive, and willing to upset the “cute-animals-only” stereotype.

  • For a big-budget animation (reportedly $150 million), it delivers — sleek production values, global-scale marketing, and voice cast expansions show Disney wasn’t shy about betting big.

But there’s a faint hiss beneath the applause:

  • Some critics argue the film feels safer than its predecessor, choosing comfort over confrontation. The sequel refuses to glance too deeply into the darkness it toys with. One review bluntly remarks, “It feels familiar — but diluted.”

  • The sheer number of characters and threads sometimes overloads. In trying to give everyone a spotlight, the film risks stretching its narrative thin. Scenes that once had punch now land as background noise.

  • And maybe the biggest risk: the nostalgia trap. A sequel like this plays a dangerous game — fans want more of what they loved, but repetition is the easiest way to become an echo. Several plot points feel like echoes of the 2016 narrative, not bold steps forward.

Zootopia 2 - PNN

Box Office & The Money Chase

Disney didn’t come back with hopes — they came back with hunger. So far, the early numbers are promising. Initial estimates show Zootopia 2 stacking up $133 million globally within just the first couple of days.

Thanksgiving weekend in North America saw $19.7 million on Day 2 — enough to dethrone many competitors, though it trails the record held by some earlier animations.

Trade analysts predict the film could earn between $125–150 million domestically over the first five-day window, and gross $270+ million worldwide by the end of its initial theatrical run.

For Disney, this isn’t just a sequel — it’s a statement. The attempt is to prove that franchises can age up, evolve, and still carry box-office muscle.

Why It Matters — More Than Just Entertainment

Zootopia in 2016 was more than a family-friendly hit. It was a mirror held to society — prejudice, stereotypes, social divides, fear of the “other.” That balance of whimsy and weight is rare.

This sequel seems to want more. With its darker tones, broader cast, and deeper themes — from systemic fear to identity politics — Zootopia 2 attempts to ask: What happens when the outsiders aren’t just foxes and rabbits — but real vultures, reptiles, and streets that forgot their innocence?

It’s a risky move. Because for every parent bringing kids for laughs, there might be a teenager staring back at the screen and questioning the world.

Zootopia 2 - PNN

The Verdict — Not Peace, But Promise

Zootopia 2 is no nostalgic petting zoo. It’s an ambition disguised as animation. It’s messy where it should be slick, bold where it could’ve played safe, and — sometimes — loud when a whisper would’ve hit harder.

But in a cinematic climate saturated with polished franchises, it dares to show its claws.

If you loved the first film for its hope, this one might hurt you — but it’ll also make you think. If you approach expecting a familiar flick, you may find yourself jolted by the noise.

In short, Zootopia 2 doesn’t try to be perfect. It tries to be relevant. And in 2025’s world of fractured cities, shifting identities and overheated fear — maybe that’s all we really need.

PNN Entertainment