Hoppers might be built with familiar parts, but Pixar’s latest isn’t trying to hide its various influences. Instead, this buoyant, freewheeling adventure about a spirited 19-year-old environmental activist who infiltrates the animal world in the body a robotic beaver wears its references for all to see. Sometimes it’s with a wink; Sometimes it’s more overt, like Kathy Najimy’s flustered scientist shouting, “This is nothing like Avatar!”
Of course, Hoppers, directed by Daniel Chong, is a little like Avatar, but who can blame her for being defensive? She’s figured out how to transport human consciousness into a robotic animal that can not only pass as a real one — in this case a beaver — but communicate with all varieties of mammals, insects and amphibians too. Is it also a “Simpsons already did it” reference? That might be getting a little too meta, but the point is Hoppers is having fun with its own chaos.
Najimy’s Dr. Fairfax is a relatively minor character in the world of Hoppers, but she, and everyone else around Beaverton (both animal and human), are rendered with the kind of specificity, care and goofiness that make them memorable regardless of screen time. This is an especially good thing when the supporting voice cast includes people like Meryl Streep, Sam Richardson, Dave Franco, Ego Nwodim and Vanessa Bayer. The last time I felt so singularly connected to the ensemble of a Pixar movie was Luca, which was also written by Jesse Andrews.
The hero at the heart of Hoppers, Mabel Tanaka (Piper Curda), is actually a kind of spiritual sister to Luca’s Giulia Marcovaldo — impassioned (some might ungenerously say “too much”) and a bit of an outcast because of it.
Mabel’s focus has always been animals: She was the kid who tried to free the pets in her elementary school (several times). As a young adult, she’s the one who shows up on the mayor’s lawn to debate. When Mayor Jerry (Jon Hamm) comes to tear down a particularly sentimental spot, the glade, in the name of finishing a highway overpass that will save his constituents four minutes on their commutes, she goes full terminator in her mission to save it — or, you know, as much as a 19-year-old in the body of a mechanical beaver can.


