Disney's Zootopia is a feisty animal kingdom with its own Peter Moosebridge - Action News
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Disney's Zootopia is a feisty animal kingdom with its own Peter Moosebridge

It's a land where lemmings run banks, sloths rule the D.M.V. and ice cream parlours employ elephants to serve up banana splits: This is Zootopia, Disney's latest animated feature about a cosmopolitan city inhabited by animals living and working together.

Film team spent 18 months on wild animal research

Zootopia a feisty animal kingdom drawn from real life

9 years ago
Duration 1:40
Filmmakers of Disney's latest animated tale sought an authentic look -- and a certain real-life news anchor

It's a land where lemmings run banks (the LemmingBrothers Bank), sloths rule the D.M.V. (Department of Mammal Vehicles)and ice cream parlours employ elephants to serve up banana splits with their trunks.

This is Zootopia,Disney's latest animated feature andalso the name of a cosmopolitan city part-tundra, part-desert, part-tropic inhabited by hundreds of thousands of animals, all living and working together. The film centres onbunnyJudy Hopps(voiced byGinniferGoodwin), a small-town cop whouncovers a conspiracy and isforced to team with sly fox Nick Wilde (Jason Bateman),who has more than a few tricks up his sleeve.

Zootopia cast members (from second left) Shakira (Gazelle), Ginnifer Goodwin (Judy Hopps) and Jason Bateman (Nick Wilde) appear at the animated film's premiere in Hollywood on Feb. 17. (Mario Anzuoni/REUTERS)

"Everyone has those preconceived ideas about animals," Zootopia's co-director Rich Moore said during an interviewat the company's animation studios in Burbank, Calif.

"We wanted to use that as a way to talk about the human world and how we treat one another.

"People will sometimes put each other in boxes and have biases toward one another because of what they look like or where they come from or who they are. But ultimately it's up to us to decide who we are."

Wild animal studies

Before the filmmakers could get that message across, they needed to do their research. Moore, co-director Byron Howard, and their creative team spent 18 months studying the animal kingdom, which included a trip to Kenya to observe relationships in the wild.

They also learned about movement and characteristics that would help the animation team make each character look realistic.

"We didn'twant it to look like a guy in an animal suit," saidDave Komorowski,Zootopia's head ofcharacters and technical animation. "We wanted to stay with real world scale on these animals and so we would have a giraffe be the real height of a giraffe. We would have a mouse be the real height of a mouse."

Dave Komorowski, Disney's head of characters and technical animation for Zootopia, shows off specially designed pants for each of the animals in the film.

Not only that, but the details of each creature right down to the hairs of theirfur had to look real, too.

For example,Komorowskisaid furrymice have about 400,000 hairs on their bodies. If his team wanted to be true to life, they'd haveto draw the same amount for each mouse depicted in Zootopia.The same went for foxes, sloths,polar bears and so forth.The amount of detaildrawn for giraffesin the film set a new Disney animation record: each had 9.2 million hairs.

"We were trying to look and see how the hairs actually worked in the real world instead of coming upwith a way to fake it," Komorowski said.

After all, audiences are savvy and can tell when even an animated character lacks authenticity. So, the filmmakers made sure to hire a pro when it came to one particular Zootopiacameo.

Zootopia co-directors Byron Howard (left) and Rich Moore, tell CBC's Zulekha Nathoo that veteran Canadian journalist Peter Mansbridge was a natural fit to play anchor Peter Moosebridge.

"We had a character in the movie that was a news anchor," said Howard. "We needed someone with the authority andthe gravitas to really bring that across."

That character Peter Moosebridgewas inspired by CBC'sown chief correspondentPeter Mansbridge.

"I thought I nailed it and they all said, as they say, 'That was really good. That was really good. Infact, I don't know if we need to do another one. Oh maybewe need to do another one.' And of course, 10 or 15 later, we were good," Mansbridge said of the experience.

"Whenever you do something new, you get a kind of burst of nervous energy and that's all good. Just makes you more fascinated in what you're involved in," he said.

Though "sometimes we have to coach the voice actors totake it in a slightly different direction," Howard said, he added that Mansbridge was a natural.

"I think one of the first takes he did is actually the one in the film."

Zootopia opens in Canada and the U.S. on March4.

Peter Mansbridge makes a cameo in Zootopia as ZTV newscaster Peter Moosebridge. (Disney/CBC)