Hoppers: Avatar with a Sense of Humor

In a way, Hoppers is everything James Cameron’s Avatar is not: it’s touching, funny, and you don’t have to suspend disbelief when you view the animation.

Both movies involve a vicarious journey through an ecosystem full of environmental struggles, and both utilize CGI to interpret human consciousness in another world. And even though the two flicks weren’t meant to be evaluated in parallel, you can’t help but think of Avatar while watching Hoppers seventeen years later with your five-year-old daughter.

Hoppers follows Mabel Tanaka, a passionate animal lover who discovers experimental technology that allows a human mind to “hop” into a robotic animal body. To save a forest habitat threatened by a highway project, she secretly transfers her consciousness into a robotic beaver so she can communicate with real animals and organize them to protect their home. Her undercover mission leads to comedic chaos, new friendships in the animal world, and a showdown with the town’s mayor who wants to destroy the habitat.

Think Mabel (Piper Curda) = Jake Sully (Sam Worthington) and Mayor Jerry Generazzo (Jon Hamm) = Colonel Miles Quaritch (Stephen Lang): idealistic hero versus over-the-top villain. Just your favorite Saturday-morning cartoon kind of fun.

Where Avatar pursues photo-realistic immersion through performance capture, Hoppers uses a stylized, “handcrafted” aesthetic to balance realism with comedic expression. I prefer the latter because you know exactly what you’re getting with an all-out animated feature for kiddos. Even with state-of-the-art CGI, our brains still notice the difference between what’s real and what’s being manipulated on a green screen. I can suspend disbelief all I want, but I enjoy films that are either fully animated or use tangible effects — like Yoda puppetry in The Empire Strikes Back — where the magic feels grounded in something physical.

Hoppers is 15 minutes too long and takes an unnecessarily dark turn at the end (making the butterfly evil was a choice), but when it lifts the avatar concept to a buoyant, humorous level, it offers more hope and life than anything profited by Mr. Cameron.

I get it: now that I’m a father of two young daughters, I’ve warmed up to these pixelated cash grabs more than I used to, and my praise for this one is probably over the top. Still, my five-year-old daughter “liked it when all the animals gave each other a hug,” and I found myself laughing at the outrageous scenarios involving a shark.

I still can’t shake how easy it is to tell what’s real and what isn’t when it comes to AI, CGI, and VFX. (Though if I squint really hard, I can see Neytiri playing Zoë Saldaña in those T-Mobile commercials.)

7 thoughts on “Hoppers: Avatar with a Sense of Humor

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  1. Hoppers is definitely the best Pixar movie of the decade. I wouldn’t compare it to Avatar, and if I did, I would still prefer Avatar. Both movies were made with the same amount of dedication just in different ways.

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    1. That’s just me being cheeky—though I did enjoy Hoppers more than Avatar. I agree that Pixar really stepped it up with this one, and there’s a lot more playfulness in both the animation, script, and character emotion.

      Liked by 1 person

  2. So Bernie, ol’ chum – nice to read a post from you. And a lovely one at that. You make too much sense.

    Timely too – your post, I mean – since you must have been chuffed about last night’s results. My movie and performance of the year got completely snubbed, which is something I’ve grown accustomed to with the Oscars.

    As a presentation in and of itself, it was about the worst thing I’ve ever seen. I remember when the Oscars felt like this amazing, super-grandiose event when I was younger – when Bob Dylan won his Oscar in 2001, or even when Hugh Jackman did that big theatrical musical entrance. Now it’s not even a shadow of what it was. It just feels so political and banal.

    Extraordinarily, it seems the Golden Globes have now well and truly surpassed it as a more viable and credible indicator of artistic quality. I never thought I’d write that.

    Anyhow, I had to get that off my chest. I hope this message finds you and your family well. 🙂

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I haven’t watched the Oscars since 2010. The elitist, inconsistent circle jerk of Hollywood is the “man behind the curtain” I wish never to see again while enjoying my movies on the screen. Characters stay in my memory. The people who play them relate to me like I might relate to a UFO. The subjective, I-will-pat-your-back-if-you-pat-mine attempt at awarding a statue to a statue makes me gag. I didn’t even see who or what won this year. Thank you for suffering for me, haha!

      Hope all is well with you and the fam.

      Just too busy to really watch anything these days. Summer break will be a good catchup!

      (Or retirement, haha!)

      Liked by 1 person

      1. I wish I had abstained from them for as long as you have – impressive for someone as passionate about movies as you are. But as you rightly say, it’s the characters and the films themselves you celebrate and identify with, rather than the spectacle (circle jerk lol) surrounding them. I chuckled at “Thank you for suffering for me.”

        I probably wouldn’t have tuned in at all, but I was watching the World Baseball Classic and caught parts of the ceremony during the ad breaks- pardon, the political propaganda fest.

        Poor Chalamet – he was in the firing line all night. I had a feeling he’d lose after the media backlash over his comments about ballet and opera, even though he corrected himself and apologised in the same interview. But apologies don’t seem to count for much in those circles.

        At least Sean Penn, even in absentia, held his ground. Good on him.

        Sounds like you’ve got your hands full – I hope everything is in good order, Maestro. Thanks for your well wishes. Cheerio.

        Liked by 1 person

        1. Matt, tell me about the World Baseball Classic. My team (the putrid Colorado Rockies) are so bad, I stopped watching MLB all together. I’ve heard about this WBC on the radio, but I have no idea what it is. Is Colombia playing?

          Liked by 1 person

          1. The final is tonight buddy. It’s like the World Cup final equivalent – USA versus Venezuela.

            It had crossed my mind which MLB team you barracked for, then it occurred to me – the Rockies. Ouch! lol So you have abstained from that as well. hehe.

            Colombia was last in the group stage. Shhhh lol

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