Judy is furious at having been tricked, setting the tone for the her relationship with Nick. Then, the foxes sell the popsicle stick as lumber. Judy insists on paying, and tells Nick, "Don't pay it back, pay it forward." Then she tells the boy to be proud of who he is, because as she puts it, "This is Zootopia, and anyone can be anything!"Īfter the clip, we were told Judy eventually catches Nick and the smaller fox melting the jumbo popsicle down and then refreezing it into a bunch of smaller ones, which they resell to some lemmings (once one lemming buys one, the rest all follow the example). But the elephant isn't having any of that, and Nick pretends to agree with the refusal, saying "there are no free handouts" even for a blind orphan. This is too much for Judy, who declares the boy should get the popsicle for free. Judy is listening and interjecting at this point, and Nick knows he has a sucker, so he says his poor adopted son won't get a popsicle for his birthday after all, adding that the doctors said the child would never make it past three years of age. We see the small fox don an elephant costume and pretend to be an elephant, and after this display the elephant reluctantly agrees to serve them.īut now things take another turn, as the wily Nick says he left his wallet at the orphanage, pretending he adopted the small fox. Nick says his son has to have the jumbo popsicle and won't get it from anywhere but the elephant store, because the boy thinks he's an elephant. At the head of the line, an adult fox named Nick Wilde (voiced by Jason Bateman) and his son try to order a jumbo popsicle, but the elephant refuses because the kid is too small and will just make a mess all over the store. In the clip, Judy waits in line at the ice cream parlor as the elephant doles out massive servings of ice cream to customers. Happy with her success, Judy treats herself to an ice cream at the local elephant ice cream parlor - and that's where we pick up the story in the exclusive clip previewed for the audience at D23 on Friday. Ever an optimist, she decides she'll be the best meter maid ever, and moves quickly around the city giving ridiculous numbers of tickets all day. But being so small, they only let her do parking duty. Only bigger, stronger animals like hippos and elephants are cops, but Judy's mantra is "anyone can be anything," so of course she makes it. Judy is a little rabbit who moved to the big city in hopes of becoming police officer. The lead character in Zootopia is Judy Hopps, voiced by Ginnifer Goodwin. The real-life DMV can often be a dull and draining experience, so it was fun and humorous to see Disney spice things up a little bit for these customers.Zootopia has parks and neighborhoods for all kinds of different animal types, including Tundra Town for cold weather creatures, a Rain Forest District full of trees where blimps move through the warm, wet canopy, and the Bunny Burrows with buildings full of rabbits - more and more rabbits every second, in fact, as the population sign makes clear with the numbers spinning higher and higher. In real life, things seem to be sped up a bit (probably because they’re being helped by their off-camera human counterparts-but that’s just our theory). Of course, in the film, the sloths perform these tasks at incredibly slow speeds. Many questioned whether or not the sloth was even real.īehind the counter at this real-life Zootopia DMV, the sloths are there to operate the computers, make phone calls, and assist customers in any way possible. Customers wait patiently in their seats for the office to open-but when the screens at the counter rise, a sloth is behind the counter ready to assist them.Ĭustomers were a bit confused, some of them frustrated, but the kids seemed to be in on the joke. The inside and outside of the real-life Zootopia DMV are decorated and designed to replicate the scene from the film. Disney, knowing full-well they could make their own fun, decided to recreate the Zootopia experience in a real-life DMV to celebrate Friday’s International Sloth Day. The scene turned out to be one of the funniest and most memorable from the film. In the film, all of the DMV attendants are sloths, moving (and talking) in slow-motion – especially annoying for a rabbit like Judy Hopps. We all remember the DMV (Department of Motor Vehicles) scene in Disney‘s Zootopia, poking fun at how slow the process can be at the DMV. Decrease Font Size Increase Font Size Text Size Print This Page Send by Email
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