Talk:Gazelle/@comment-33859923-20171208181735

One thing I've been wondering about is why the artist(s) who created the characters in this movie made their proportions so wildly off. The female characters have narrow upper bodies and overly wide hips, and the males tend to be huge from the waist up and tiny from the waist down.

I've been drawing anthropomorphic characters for a number of years (and writing stories including them), and maybe I buck the trend by drawing my characters in a more realistic manner. I recently drew my own version of Judy Hopps (http://disney.wikia.com/wiki/File:Judy_Hopps_(FA).jpg) and posted a copy on her page of this site. I think I'll make my own version of Gazelle and post it here in the comment section of her page. It'll take me a few days because I'm starting on a second drawing of Judy Hopps today (the first was in her uniform, and the second will be in street clothes). When I make my rendition of Gazelle, it'll be in the pose and outfit shown at the top of her page.

I do agree with others that the character of Gazelle should get more screen time, perhaps in a future sequel, using the smae voice actor.From what I saw in the movie, the population of the world that the city of Zootopia is on seems to have an "equal but seperate" society, with no inter-species relationships beyond just being friends or working together. Back in the 1970's, there was a short run comic book series called "Tales of the Aniverse" (ANimale unIVERSE), that did have interspecies relationships, complete with mixed species characters. In my own stories, I do have some characters who have mixed ancestry, which was the result of genetic manipulation. Anybody interested in knowing what the titles of my stories are, send me a message.