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| The animation feature topped the box office opening weekend |
There was a lot of buzz that the animation feature Hoppers beat out The Bride!, making it Pixar's biggest opening weekend in a decade.
Hoppers was screening at our neighbourhood theatre so we took two kids, aged 7 and 8 to watch this film -- in 3D.
The 3D enhances the animation, but it isn't totally used to its advantage.
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| Mabel is an environmental activist in her teens |
But then the mayor, Jerry Generazzo has plans to destroy the natural habitat for animals in order to build a freeway and Mabel is desperate to stop him.
She asks for help from her biology professor Dr Samantha Fairfax, but then Mabel discovers they have developed technology that helps them communicate with animals.
Mabel uses it to try to convince them -- in particular beavers, as they are "nature's engineers" -- to move back to the glade, along with everyone else, but it's not as easy as she thinks.
The premise of the film, that Mabel can communicate with the animals is fun, creative and she also learns "pond rules" and the hierarchy of the animal kingdom.
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| Dr Fairfax (left) is Mabel's biology professor |
Actor John Hamm makes for a sneaky mayor, and Bobby Moynihan is a funny beaver monarch named King George. I was surprised to see Meryl Streep voiced the Insect Queen, a short, but amusing cameo.
Apparently the Pixar animators enlisted the help of ecohydrologist Emily Fairfax who studies beavers and how they change landscapes by altering the flow of streams and rivers.
Hoppers has a strong environmental message, how to strike a balance between conservation and development, and how most humans view their role in the world as being at the top of the food chain.
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| Ecohydrologist Emily Fairfax |
But then he discovered that beavers are "nature's engineers" and thought that was really cool and took six years to develop Hoppers.
Don't watch too many of the trailers because some of the gags get old really fast. Just go watch it in the theatre!
Hoppers
Written and directed by Daniel Chong
105 minutes











































