Movie review: ‘Night of the Zoopocalypse’ (2024)

Original post written by dronon

Furry Halloween recommendation! Night of the Zoopocalypse is a 92-minute film from 2024, co-produced between Canada, France and Belgium by… quite a lot of animation studios (we’ll get to that). It was written by James Kee and Steven Hoban, and directed by Rodrigo Perez-Castro and Ricardo Curtis.

This is an animated comedy horror film for kids. It walks the fine line between those genres with perfect precision (specifically zombie apocalypse), and it works! It appeals to adults too; I’m not a fan of horror at all, and I loved it! Rotten Tomatoes rates it 88% / 82%. I’m not linking to a trailer, because I’d like to keep some things a surprise.

If you’re looking to introduce kids to the horror genre, this is the film to do it with. In the past I might have said – reluctantly – Coraline, from the Laika studio. Most of their animated films tend to get… dark, but I’d also say they veer into the grotesque, and that’s not so fun. Zoopocalypse doesn’t do that. It’s got slobber and slime here and there, yet surprisingly, no blood. And still, it works!

The basic premise is that a meteor fragment lands in a zoo during the night, turning an animal into a contagious, evil zombie monster who soon converts most of the other animals, except for a small group who must figure out how to survive. There are no humans in the movie, aside from some families and one zookeeper at the beginning, who leave at closing time.

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