Dinner
and a Movie
By
Steve Herte
Zootopia (Walt
Disney Pictures, 2016) – Directors: Byron Howard, Rich Moore &
Jared Bush. Writers: Jared Bush & Phil Johnston (s/p). Jared
Bush, Byron Howard, Rich Moore, Phil Johnston, Jennifer Lee, &
Josie Trinidad, Jim Reardon (story). Dan Fogelman (additional story
material). Voices: Ginnifer Goodwin, Jason Bateman, Idris Elba, Jenny
Slate, Nate Torrence, Bonnie Hunt, Don Lake, Tommy Chong, J.K.
Simmons, Octavia Spencer, Alan Tudyk, Shakira, Raymond S. Persi,
Della Saba, Jenny Slate, & Maurice LaMarche. Animated, Color,
Rated PG, 108 minutes.
In the opening
scenes, we see the Bunnyburrow school play being enacted by Judy
Hopps (Saba; later by Goodwin), a bunny, and her classmates
describing how predator and prey behaved before the establishment of
Zootopia, a city where mammals are equal. Judy, to the horror of her
parents Stu and Bonnie (Lake and Hunt), wants to be a policeman and
make the world a better place. Stu and Bonnie are humble carrot
farmers and do nothing more exciting than sell vegetables from a
stand by the side of the main road. Judy is not your usual timid
rabbit. Neither are her 275 brothers and sisters. She takes on the
bully of her class, Gideon Gray (Johnston), even though he’s a red
fox, the rabbit’s main predator.
Judy’s parents
cannot deter her when she’s old enough to attend the Police
Academy. At first, she’s humiliated by her inability to complete an
obstacle course, but she steels herself and uses innovation to
graduate at the top of her class. This, however, does not stop her
father from a teary goodbye as she boards the train to Zootopia.
Zootopia is divided
into five districts to accommodate the various habitat needs of the
diverse mammals that live there: the Downtown District, Sahara
Square, Tundratown, Little Rodentia and the Rainforest District, all
of which are reached by train. Judy travels through each wide-eyed
and amazed until she reaches the downtown station. All Zootopia
denizens walk on two legs and wear the appropriate clothing of their
occupations. Judy confronts an enormous Times Square-style animated
billboard where popular singer Gazelle (Shakira) welcomes everyone to
Zootopia.
At the police
station, her small stature almost goes unnoticed by the
doughnut-eating, portly desk sergeant, Clawhauser (Torrence). But
once he looks down and sees her, he immediately insults her.
All the other cops
in the briefing room are exceedingly larger than Judy, but she’s
not shy. Chief Bogo (Elba), a powerfully built Cape buffalo, is
bigger than the rest and dominates the podium. He mentions that they
have a new recruit but also notes that he doesn’t care and gives
out the assignments. Fourteen citizens of Zootopia have gone missing
and after he divides the districts among the larger policemen he
gives Judy parking ticket duty. She tries to protest, given the
nature of the situation at hand, but he bets her she couldn’t give
out 100 tickets an hour. She successfully hands out 200 tickets in an
hour (including one to herself).
Citizens are
starting to complain to her about her prompt ticketing when a store
owner begs her for help in a robbery. Duke Weaselton (Tucyk) has just
run off with a duffel bag of stuff he stole and she pursues him. The
hilarious chase ends when the weasel takes a giant doughnut from an
advertisement in Little Rodentia and throws it at her. She uses the
doughnut to catch the weasel and roll him into the police station.
Chief Bogo remains unimpressed.
Back on duty, Judy
notices Nick Wilde (Bateman), a red fox (she has a can of fox
repellant on her belt from her father), skulking around an elephant
ice cream parlor, and decides to investigate. Inside, she hears him
ordering a “jumbo pop” and being refused by the elephant
proprietor. Out of nowhere, Nick produces a little fennec fox whom he
claims is his kid. Nick’s story is that the little one has always
wanted to be an elephant and even has a cute elephant mask. Judy is
moved and convinces the elephant to sell them a jumbo pop, even when
Nick gets her to pay for it, pretending that he forgot his wallet.
Judy feels good
about herself until she drives around and sees Nick melting down the
jumbo pop into glass jugs. She follows him to Tundratown where the
liquid is refrozen into smaller bits to be sold to a queue of
lemmings. When she confronts Nick about this con, he has a logical
answer for every deed.
Back at the station
house, Judy is still lobbying for a real case when Mrs. Otterton
(Spencer) gets past Sergeant Clawhauser and begs Chief Bogo to find
her husband, who is one of the missing citizens. Judy volunteers for
the job and Chief Bogo almost nixes it when Deputy Mayor Bellwether
(Slate), a sheep intercedes and overrules him. To Judy’s chagrin,
she agrees to solve the case in 48 hours or resign.
Since Chief Bogo
will not put Judy on their computer system, she needs to get her
information in a different way. Using her tape recorder pen, she
hoodwinks Nick into helping her. They find out that Mr. Otterton
visited a yoga expert at a new wave spa and speak to the proprietor,
Mr. Yax (Chong), who takes them into the spa. Judy is shocked at
first that all the animals are naked, but bravely proceeds. The
elephant yoga instructor remembers nothing, but Yax remembers it all
for her, even the license plate number of the car Mr. Otterton drove
up in.
How to trace the
license plate number? Nick has a friend named Flash in the DMV
(Department of Mammal Vehicles). After a seemingly interminable time,
the two learn the vehicle was a limo belonging to a “Mr. Big.”
Nick does not want to go there; he sold Mr. Big a supposedly wool rug
that was made from skunk hide and does not want to get “iced”
(literally) by the Mafioso mammal. But Judy gets him to go. The limo
is torn up inside from claw marks and they find Mr. Otterton’s
wallet when two polar bears catch them and bring them to Mr. Big
(LaMarche), a shrew carried in by the biggest polar bear. He indeed
does want to “ice” Nick, and his minions open a trap door in the
floor and hold Nick and Judy over it when his daughter runs in and
tells him how this policeman saved her from being crushed by a giant
doughnut. Mr. Big decides to help them if they attend her wedding.
The claw marks in
the car were made by Mr. Otterton who, for some unknown reason, had
“gone wild” and had attacked the driver. Judy and Nick visit the
driver in the rain forest district and find him cowering in his house
with claw marks on his face and muttering something about “night
howlers.” Suddenly, he goes wild and attacks them. The chase leaves
the two tangled in vines and suspended over a chasm when Chief Bogo
and the police arrive. The driver has disappeared and Chief Bogo
demands Judy’s badge. Nick vouches for her and gets Bogo to relent,
calculating that she still has 10 hours.
The revelation that
the missing citizens are all predators and all have “gone wild”
gain Judy her first press conference and a meeting with Mayor Leodore
Lionheart (Simmons), a pompous, condescending lion who proudly
introduces Zootopia’s first rabbit policeman. It doesn’t go well.
Her analysis alienates Nick and throws Zootopia into confusion and a
veritable race war of predator against prey.
Back in Bunnyborrow,
the “night howlers” clue strikes a memory in Judy’s mind and
she runs to find Nick. After a tearful apology she regains his
support and the two learn from traffic cameras that wolves captured
Mr. Manchas and took him to the town dam. Here, they find 14 cages
filled with snarling fierce predators, including Mr. Otterton. They
also learn that it was Mayor Lionheart who locked them all in there.
Zootopia is
an excellent family film with great plot twists, clever humor,
lovable characters and lots of good clean fun. The hour and 48
minutes passed before I knew it. I was engaged constantly, wanting to
know what was going to happen next. I’ve said it before, Disney
made the best corporate decision ever by buying Pixar. The digital
effects were superb and the animation realistic. The casting is
perfect in every way. The story never lagged and the soundtrack never
got in the way. Parents, take your kids to this one. There are good
lessons here about friendship and prejudice. The two last lines are:
Nick: “Sly bunny!” Judy: “Dumb fox!” My only question (which
the movie never answered) is: if Zootopia is 90% prey and 10%
predator, what do they eat, if not each other?
Rating:
5 out of 5 Martini glasses.
Edwin
and Neals’ Fish Bar
345
East 6th St. New
York
A “Fish Bar.”
What could that mean? All sorts of images went through my mind as I
chose this two-month-old East Village seafood restaurant. The space
is not pictured on their website and, when I arrived there, I knew it
wasn't for good reason. Outside, the big window and airlock door are
trimmed in fashionable New York black and the lit sign above the
window states simply “fish bar” in lower case with “Edwin and
Neals’” appearing in much smaller type in an outline of New York
State on the door.
Inside is a beehive
of activity. The bar is full of chatty, drinking people with not a
seat empty. I completely missed the Captain’s Station because it
was a small laptop sitting on the end of the bar out of my sight to
the right. The main dining area to the left was packed with diners,
not a seat in view. I tried to stand out of the way, but there was
precious little room to do even that. A server rounded a table
heading for the bar approached me and said, “One moment.”
When he returned, I
announced my reservation. It was then I saw the tiny laptop in the
corner. He led me to a possibility of two seats at the long table he
had just skirted, one facing the back wall, one facing the window. I
chose the latter. The four tables at the window were all occupied and
the long table where I sat now had seven of the eight chairs filled
with customers. The two tables in back of me were also filled. Wow, I
thought, this place must really be either good or cheap. It was only
a little bigger than my living room.
The décor is
minimal: white stucco walls with ship’s wheels and crab mallets
mounted thereon, dark wood bare-topped tables with a rough finish (I
almost got a splinter), and sturdy, comfortable chairs. I’ve seen
comparable places on waterfronts in New England. I couldn’t tell if
music was playing because the various conversations drowned out all
other sound.
My server had to
bend down so that we could hear and understand each other. He brought
me my water and the single card food menu and asked if I wanted a
cocktail. I asked whether they had Beefeaters. “No, we have Spring
44. It’s domestic.” I agreed to have him make my favorite martini
with this new (to me) gin. It was surprisingly good. I learned later
that the company that makes it is based in Colorado. It doesn’t
have the character of Beefeaters, but it’s not flowery like Bombay
Sapphire or the trendy gins.
The food menu
featured Shares (first courses big enough to share), Fish Bar Dinner
(basic fish dishes made simply with Sides), and Mains. There were
nine beers brewed in New York, one from Connecticut, one from
Pennsylvania and one from Georgia, three white wines and two reds.
As I was reading the
menu, two lovelies to my left were paying their check and leaving. I
commented on their beauty and one recommended the octopus cassoulet.
I was considering that dish but the inclusion of bacon was deterring
me because of Fridays in Lent. She assured me that the dish doesn’t
have that much bacon. I thanked her and they left.
A young couple took
their place soon after as I finally made my decision. We started
chatting as their appetizer was served. The next thing I know, the
young lady asked me if I would like to taste their sweet and sour
calamari with peanuts and cilantro. When I said yes, she put almost
half of her appetizer in my bread dish. I commented that she reminded
me of a good friend who always did the same thing. The calamari were
well made and tender and the dark sauce was indeed a sweet and sour
flavor, speckled with sesame seeds.
As I was eating,
Ivan came over to take my order. I listed my three courses and the
order they should arrive and told him to time everything so that no
two dishes come out together.
The oyster list was
impressive, but the first east coast oyster category was crossed off.
No problem there, because I prefer the west coast oysters. I ordered
two each of the three west coast varieties. They were served on a
rectangular silver platter on a bed of crumbled ice with a lemon
wedge and three sauces; horseradish, garlic and cocktail tomato. Ivan
pointed out which were which from left to right, but forgive me, I
didn’t write down their names. The first two were the smallest and
were brinier than I’m used to west coast oysters being, but they
were good. The next two were a little larger and less salty, and the
third two were perfect. I tried each of the sauces on every other
oyster. All good.
The couple to my
left were enjoying a lovely Austrian white wine, but I ordered the
Tres Palactos Pinot Noir from Chile. It was great with the second
course, which was the main attraction for me at Edwin and Neals’.
That course was Buffalo frog legs. Tender, delicate frog legs in a
mild form of Buffalo sauce with garlic and what they called a spicy
slaw. I loved it.
But the “slaw” was actually celery sticks and a carrot stick with a bleu cheese dressing poured over them. It took a lot of coaxing but I actual tempted the young man across from me to try frog legs. I think he liked it.
But the “slaw” was actually celery sticks and a carrot stick with a bleu cheese dressing poured over them. It took a lot of coaxing but I actual tempted the young man across from me to try frog legs. I think he liked it.
It was time for my
main course, a dish I’ve never had before. The cuttlefish ribbons
with caviar were served in a simple bowl in a pink cream sauce. One
might think that cuttlefish, being related to squid, would taste
similar. They do, but they’re a different texture and slightly more
tender. The adventure was worth being good on a Friday and not having
the cassoulet.
Ivan listed only
three desserts and only one was interesting, so I ordered the fried bananas. The crispy rolls were served on vanilla ice cream with
lightly whipped fresh cream on top. I was so satisfied I forgot to
order coffee.
I knew when I left
why Edwin and Neals’ was so busy that night. The food is really
good (even innovative), the ambiance is extremely informal, and the
prices are very reasonable. But the next time I hear someone call
Henry’s End “cramped,” I’m going to send them here.
For the Dinner and a Movie archive, click here.
For the Dinner and a Movie archive, click here.
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