Summary Capsule





| reviews |
PoolMan's Rating: I can make the "p-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-lease" noise Roger makes. I'm so ashamed.
PoolMan's Review: Y'know, it's no small accomplishment when a movie maker can create a single piece that entertains more than one target audience. Anybody can
make a movie for kids, anybody can make a movie for adults, and anybody can
make a movie for Mutants. But the most classic and fondly remembered forms
of entertainment tend to be the ones that hit all three equally (or at
least the first two). You know, the kind of stuff you remember watching as
a kid and laughing at, and then when you watch it as an adult, you say "Oh
my god! I can't believe I never noticed THAT before!". There's just
always something new to see. Who Framed Roger Rabbit? is just such an
animal, and I'm pleasantly surprised at how well it stands up to its age
(and mine).
If you somehow have never heard of WFRR (it was probably the most hyped movie of 1988), the concept was mindnumbing at the time. It was among the first movies to believably mix live action and cartoon characters in a live action set ("live action set", as in don't write in about Dick Van Dyke dancing with penguins against a cartoon backdrop!). That means the Toons walk around in California just like any other citizens, smoking cigars, firing guns, and smashing plates. Although CG technologies have come a long way since (see Lord of the Rings for a current example of animation in the "real" world), this was probably the big groundbreaker that made most of it possible. Through a crazy array of puppetry, machinery, very creative acting, and lots of post production, we get to see the landmark characters of Disney, Warner Brothers, and countless others grace the screen, interacting with each other and the human cast.
The fun of the movie as a kid is obviously the Toons running around. Seeing Donald and Daffy Duck play dueling pianos is a riot. The fun as an adult is getting all the "parents-only" jokes that fly through the air. The story is definitely adult-oriented, involving blackmail, adultery, murder, and lots of other stuff we can't get Justin to finally admit to. The titular Roger Rabbit is framed for the murder of Marvin Acme, a rich Toon lover and gag merchant who is caught playing "pattycake" with Roger's wife, Jessica. Grizzled, Toon-hating detective Eddie Valiant is dragged into the conflict as it becomes apparent that there's more than a lover's jealousy at play. Will Roger be cleared? Will the Toons be destroyed by Judge Doom's horrific Dip? Will Bob Hoskin's accidentally say "Ooga booga" in his Brit accent again? Oh the suspense!
Boiled down, this flick is a great take on old 40's detective stories with the incredibly creative addition of cartoon characters into the mix, which brings with it all the violently fun charm you've come to expect from watching Bugs Bunny cartoons all your life. It's fourteen years old now, so some of the effects seem just a little dusty, but they're still quite remarkable considering what was available to director Robert Zemeckis back then. Add in the fact that there's no end of sexual innuendo and rumored nudity (see Intermission below), and you've got something the kids can enjoy right alongside the parents, albeit for vastly different reasons. You'd be "looney toons" to not see it!
| extras |
![]() 1988 Rated PG Animated Comedy Director
Starring
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Is It Worth Staying Through End Credits?
Not really. After Porky says "That's all folks!", you can go home. In fact, this film set a record for the running time of its end credits - almost eight minutes!
The Movie Store!
Intermission!
Terry Gilliam of Monty Python fame was set to be the original
director, but pulled out because he thought the projecct would be too
difficult.
Bob Hoskins watched his young daughter to learn how to act with imaginary characters. He later had problems with hallucinations.
Rumours abound about whether Jessica Rabbit wears underwear or not. In the original release, there are two notorious scenes where the viewer could see up her dress, under which you could clearly see she was "going commando". These scenes have been reanimated so white panties can be seen.
Official and Not-So-Official Websites
Dew Guys |
Roger Rabbit: Yeah! The probate! My Uncle Thumper had a problem with HIS
probate. He had to take these big pills, and drink lots of water!
Eddie: Not prostate, you idiot! PROBATE!
Eddie: Anybody know you're here?
Roger: Nobody. Not a soul, except, uh...
Eddie: Who?
Roger: Well, you see, I didn't know where your office was. So I asked the
newsboy. He didn't know. So I asked the fireman, green grocerier, the
butcher the baker, they didn't know. But the liquor store guy. He knew.
Jessica Rabbit: You don't know what it's like being a woman looking the way
I do.
Eddie Valiant: You don't know what it's like being a man looking at a woman
looking the way you do.
Roger: We toons may act idiotic, but we're not stupid.
Eddie: You mean you could've taken your hand out of that cuff at any time?
Roger: Not at any time, Eddie, only when it was funny.
Dolores: Is that a rabbit in your pocket or are you just happy to see me?
Jessica: I'm not bad, I'm just drawn that way.
Eddie: I'm sick of taking falls, I'm bouncing off the walls, when I get
done I'll have some fun I'll kick you in the...
Roger: Nose!
Weasel: That don't rhyme with walls!
Eddie: No, but this does!
[kicks the Weasel in the crotch]
Eddie: A ladies' man, eh?
Baby Herman: The problem is, I've got a fifty year old lust but a three year old dinky.
DVD Review
Soundtrack Review
Smiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiile, darn ya, smiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiile....
Chances are, if you've seen this flick, you remember this tune. It, and
many more other Merry Melodies, populate the soundtrack, along with some
suitable lonely jazz (and Jessica's big singing number, of course) make for
a memorable, if ditzy, audio experience.
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