Movies

The Best Romance of the Year Is … Between an Animated Fox and Bunny?

Zootopia 2 smuggles the structure and tropes of romance into a Disney movie.

Nick and Judy from Zootopia 2, facing each other in the confession scene. There are hearts overlaid.
Photo illustration by Slate. Images via Disney and Irina Gordeeva/iStock/Getty Images Plus.

In a popular recent movie, two protagonists work together as partners in a police department. They have very different personalities: The man is cynical, quick with a quip, always in a loose tie and a tucked-in shirt. The woman is earnest, mission-driven, persistent, idealistic. They are past their meet-cute and their first adventure together and into a consolidating phase of their relationship, when they will decide whether the chemistry they felt in the first blush of encountering one another signifies something real. Every adult in the audience will spend the movie’s run time wondering if they will or won’t.

No, these are not the main characters of a rom-com or a romantic drama. They are Nick Wilde, the cartoon fox voiced by Jason Bateman, and Judy Hopps, the cartoon rabbit voiced by Ginnifer Godwin, who are the stars of Disney’s family hit Zootopia 2. The movie, which was released over Thanksgiving, is ostensibly a buddy-cop comedy about anthropomorphic critters living together in sort-of, mostly peace in a geoengineered town. But, somehow, it’s primarily inspiring heart-eyes in viewers past the age of 16. Zootopia 2 is making romance readers post on Reddit about how much better this couple is than those in the books they’ve recently read and, on TikTok, declaring that Zootopia 2 is “for the booktok girlies,” then recommending books with male main characters with vibes similar to Nick Wilde’s. On Letterboxd, review after review nods at the idea that this children’s animated movie contains within itself a rom-com for the ages. “Never in my many years of life did I think I’d find myself YEARNING for a fox and a bunny to kiss,” wrote one reviewer. “Yet here I am.”

To those whose only exposure to this movie was as a child a decade ago when the first Zootopia came out, or perhaps as a parent of a child back then, this development may seem sudden. But this isn’t Nick and Judy’s maiden voyage as an unlikely ship—even back in 2016, the idea that these two should probably be a couple, regardless of their incompatible biology, generated a ton of fan art, including an incredible artifact of the internet that has its own Wikipedia page and is known as the “Zootopia abortion comic.” (In short, Nick and Judy conceive a child. Nick wants to keep it; Judy doesn’t. You should probably just read it.) In an online world where I’ve seen people admit to such unholy ships as Snape and Dobby from Harry Potter, Sam and Dean (they’re brothers!) from Supernatural, or Grandpa Rick from Rick and Morty with Stan Pines from Gravity Falls, imagining a bunny and a fox who were created to entertain kids ending up in bed together is practically tame. (Not to mention, enjoying cartoon foxes a little bit too much is a time-honored tradition. A lot of people out there are willing to publicly own feeling something extra for the Robin Hood fox, voiced by Brian Bedford in Disney’s 1973 animated feature.)

But this sequel has given #WildeHopps new power by smuggling the structure and tropes of romance into a Disney movie. Twice, Wilde and Hopps go undercover and present to the world as a couple—aka “fake dating,” one of the best tools that romance writers looking to bring their couple together and tease readers with possibilities have got. At an event where they’ve put on fancy dress to blend into a crowd, Nick gets jealous when another man shows interest in Judy, who looks really cute in her outfit. Nick has a nickname for Judy that he always uses, except for (as commenters on a few TikToks have noticed) when he’s very worried about her, when he calls her her actual name. This is a classic reveal, a recognizable thing for the “hides-his-feelings” cynic in a cynic/sunshine pairing (like this one) to do. At the climax of the story, Nick discards his innate sense of self-preservation and goes to great lengths to save Judy from peril, after which they come together in a desperate embrace, speaking over each other in their haste to describe their feelings of relief—a climax, in every way but the literal.

This PG-rated lack of consummation leaves good scope for the imagination, and some people find it even more fun to find a romance in the wild (sorry) than to pick up a book with the expectation of its delivery. As one romance reader on Reddit explained the appeal: “I think it works better than other ships because it is not forced. It is innocent, it is ambiguous on purpose and it makes sense in the Zootopia universe.”

Maybe! Or maybe, as another Letterboxd reviewer puts it, the writers of Zootopia 2 are just engaged in a “SydCarmy level of straightbaiting”—that’s a reference to a popular ship from The Bear that is also, to be frank, never going to happen—and they’re very, very good at it. The movie ends with a tease for a threequel for the ages. In Zootopia 2’s postcredits scene, Judy plays a recording of Nick saying he loves her, over and over, until the neighbors complain. And in an interview with Collider, Jason Bateman joked about the #WildeHopps shippers: “Wait till you see the third—cue the heavy bass line.” Don’t tease us, Nick! Or, on second thought, please do.