How to do this question geometrically:
Interpretations:
|z-z1| - distance from z1
|z-z2| - distance from z2
|z-z1| = |z-z2| - the perpendicular bisector of z1 and z2. Note at any point on the perpendicular bisector, distance from the two points are the same.
|z-z1| < |z-z2| - distance from z1 is less than distance from z2. To illustrate this, draw the perpendicular bisector, the side including z1 will satisfy the condition that it is closer to z1 than z2
|z-z1| + |z-z2| = 4 - this is the geometric definition of an ellipse: sum of distances from two points are constant [compare to the definition of a circle: distance from one point is constant]
You can also do this algebraically to convince yourself, but that is too tedious and I can't be bothered.