TheMalaysiaTime

Disney Pixar’s ‘Hoppers’ seeks to turn viral meme into box office gold

2026-03-05 - 11:44

Actor Jon Hamm (left) poses with Tom Lizard at the world premiere of the film ‘Hoppers’ at the El Capitan Theatre in Los Angeles. (EPA Images pic) LOS ANGELES: Walt Disney’s Pixar Animation Studios is hoping a viral meme featuring a googly-eyed lizard character from its new film, “Hoppers,” translates into box office success when the movie opens this weekend in theaters. The studio unwittingly created a social media hit when a 28-second clip of a goofy-looking sea-green reptile tapping a glowing screen to trigger an automated voice saying “lizard” appeared in the end credits of another Pixar film, Elio, released last June. The clip went viral. It sparked music mixes on TikTok using songs by Far East Movement and The Ting Tings, a “Lizard Click” website repeating the word “lizard” in a robotic voice, and thousands of posts that drew about 316 million views in two months, according to The Walt Disney Company. “I don’t know that you can ever predict these things. As soon as you try to make something go viral, that’s like certain death,” said Pixar’s Chief Creative Officer Pete Docter. “We just thought it was funny. We thought this character is quirky and weird.” Pixar quietly laid claim to the character in a social media post in August, simply saying, “his name is Tom.” “People fell in love with Tom the Lizard,” said Martha Morrison, head of marketing for Walt Disney Studios. “Then, we were sort of figuring out when’s the right time to identify that Tom the Lizard is part of our movie.” The film is about a young animal lover, Mabel, who uses new technology to “hop” her consciousness into a robotic beaver and communicate directly with animals. While audiences have flocked to cinemas to see animated sequels, such as Disney’s “Zootopia 2,” which is approaching US$2 billion in worldwide ticket sales, original films with unfamiliar characters and stories, like “Elio,” have struggled at the box office, bringing in a modest US$20.8 million on opening weekend. “Hoppers” is on track to open to US$35 to US$40 million in the US and Canada, according to one estimate. Original animation has always been a harder sell, but that’s been particularly true since the COVID-19 outbreak, when Disney released animated films like “Soul,” “Luca” and “Turning Red” straight to its Disney+ streaming service. Families got accustomed to seeing new animated films from the comfort of their own living rooms. “You know, it’s tough right now because people on the one hand say they want original stuff, but they, with their pocketbooks, kind of vote more for the sequels,” said Docter. “I think what it is, you have to balance like stuff that people go, ‘I recognize that, I see that in my own life, but it also feels like nothing I’ve ever seen before,’ which is a really difficult needle to thread.” Tom Lizard has become an ambassador for “Hoppers,” showing up in person at screenings, DJ-ing an event for social media influencers and photo-bombing ESPN broadcasts in San Francisco during Super Bowl week. The appearances are part of a broader marketing push that includes advance screenings and sneak peeks, in addition to commercials that aired during the Super Bowl and the Milano Cortina Winter Olympics. The goal is to be in as many places as possible, convey the film’s unique brand of humor and create a sense of urgency for movie-goers to head to the theaters, said Morrison. Box office analyst Paul Dergarabedian said “Hoppers” has received the best reviews for a Pixar movie in a decade. “Original animated films such as ‘Dog Man,’ ‘The Wild Robot’ and most recently ‘GOAT’ have all done very well because they’re actually good movies,” said Dergarabedian. “That’s a currency that can deliver dividends for the long term.”

Share this post: