The Sydney Morning Herald logo
Advertisement

This was published 3 months ago

Movies to see this week: It’s been almost a decade. Was Zootopia 2 worth the wait?

Jake Wilson and Sandra Hall
Updated ,first published
Pinned post from 11.32am on Nov 27, 2025
Go to latest

Welcome to this week’s film reviews

By

Hello and welcome to this week’s film review wrap – the big movies landing in cinemas this week.

If you want to stay in touch with all the latest movie news from across the globe, as well as reviews, please sure to sign up to our newsletter.

Must-see movies, interviews and all the latest from the world of film delivered to your inbox. Sign up for our Screening Room newsletter.

Latest Posts

Almost a decade on, these furred and feathered eccentrics maintain charm of the original film

By Sandra Hall

FILM
Zootopia 2 ★★★½
(PG) 108 minutes

Wise-cracking reptiles, wise pachyderms and scheming weasels are not new to animated movies. Filmmakers have been taking an anthropomorphic attitude to animals since Walt Disney first went into business, but the Zootopia films have taken the idea a bit further.

The first one, which came out in 2016, was a Pixar creation set in an elaborately conceived metropolis populated by a multitude of animal species harbouring the kind of prejudices to be found in all big cities.

Nick Wilde, voiced by Jason Bateman, left, and Judy Hopps, voiced by Ginnifer Goodwin, in a scene from Zootopia 2.AP

The films’ diminutive star, Judy Hopps (Ginnifer Goodwin), a rabbit from a small town, discovers this the hard way. As the Zootopia police force’s first female cottontail, she has a rough time trying to prove herself in an organisation run by alpha male heavyweights.

Emma Thompson a credible, touching heroine in snowbound thriller

By Sandra Hall

Dead of Winter
★★★½
(MA) 97 minutes

A grey-faced Emma Thompson is menaced by a couple of deranged characters with a hunting rifle in this aptly named thriller, but it’s highly likely that hypothermia will claim her before they can.

The Minnesota setting – a snowbound purgatory in the middle of nowhere – is the star of the show, although it does have formidable competition from Thompson, whose Minnesota accent matches Frances McDormand’s efforts in Fargo. But it’s hard to kick the notion that you’re watching a small group of people trapped in a vast refrigerator, an impression reinforced by the news that the shoot took place in Finland, where the temperature dropped to minus 29 degrees.

Emma Thompson in Dead of Winter.

Thompson’s Barb has been in the area for most of her life, running a fishing shack with her beloved husband, Carl. Now Carl is dead after a long, debilitating illness and he’s left behind one request – that his ashes be scattered on Lake Hilda, a favourite spot of his and Barb’s when they were young and falling in love.

Scarlett Johansson’s directing debut misses the point

By Jake Wilson

FILM
Eleanor the Great
(PG) 98 minutes ★★½

Occasionally in Scarlett Johansson’s Eleanor the Great we’re given a glimpse of the Japanese poster for Crumb, Terry Zwigoff’s extraordinary 1994 documentary on the great underground cartoonist Robert Crumb.

That seems random, until the penny drops. Zwigoff went on to direct the mordant 2001 graphic novel adaptation Ghost World, starring Johansson and Thora Birch as precociously cynical high school graduates bent on making the most of their last summer before adulthood.

June Squibb and Erin Kellyman in Eleanor the Great.

Ghost World was one of the films that put Johansson on the path to becoming the movie star she remains today – so in her first film as director, why shouldn’t she pay tribute to her mentor?

Advertisement

Knives Out goes Gothic in latest Daniel Craig whodunnit parody

By Jake Wilson

Wake Up Dead Man: A Knives Out Mystery
★★★
(M) 144 minutes

For the renowned amateur detective Benoit Blanc (Daniel Craig), solving murders is an amusing hobby, a way of flaunting his intellectual gifts. But that’s not the whole story: like his creator Rian Johnson, Blanc is not just a dandy but something of a bleeding heart, regularly opposed to the powers that be.

In his previous cases, he’s gone up against the east coast upper crust (Knives Out) and Silicon Valley (Glass Onion). In Wake Up Dead Man, again written and directed by Johnson for Netflix, he faces a still more formidable adversary in the Catholic Church

Read the full review here.

Pinned post from 11.32am on Nov 27, 2025

Welcome to this week’s film reviews

By

Hello and welcome to this week’s film review wrap – the big movies landing in cinemas this week.

If you want to stay in touch with all the latest movie news from across the globe, as well as reviews, please sure to sign up to our newsletter.

Must-see movies, interviews and all the latest from the world of film delivered to your inbox. Sign up for our Screening Room newsletter.

Advertisement