Directed by: Daniel Chong
Starring: Piper Curda, Bobby Moynihan, Jon Hamm, Kathy Najimy
Hoppers is the latest Pixar feature and it's a downer. The subject matter of Hoppers is heavy lifting for kids, and even more so for adults. The message of environmental protection is certainly prevalent and timely, but the atmosphere of Hoppers simply feels blah.
Hoppers opens with Mabel (Curda), a youngster who finds herself in trouble at school for civil activism. She learns to channel her energies positively through frequent visits with her grandmother, who has a lake out back and allows Mabel to become one with nature. However, Mabel's grandmother dies and the lake is emptied out with the wildlife displaced in order to make way for a new expressway. Mabel decides to fight back after stumbling on to a scientific experiment in which a human's brainwaves can be inserted into an animal's avatar, so she'd be able to speak to animals.
Mabel uses the opportunity to organize the animals to return to the lake and retake it. Complications of course ensue with car chases and slapstick afoot. It sounds like it should be fun, but a pall is cast over the movie because of its underlying seriousness. Hoppers wants to say something, and that's admirable, but it's all about the execution. Kids will talk their parents into seeing it, thinking it will be a lighthearted adventure, and adults may assume it'll have enough to keep them interested. Unfortunately, they will be wrong on both accounts.