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Who Framed Roger Rabbit

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Who Framed Roger Rabbit is a 1988 motion picture produced by The Walt Disney Company and Amblin Entertainment that combines animation and live action, and offers a unique chance to see many cartoons from different studios in a single film. It was one of the last star turns for Mel Blanc and other voice actors of animation's Golden Era. The film is set in a fictionalized Los Angeles in 1947, where animated characters (derogatorily referred to as "toons") are real beings who live alongside humans in the real world, most of them working as actors in cartoons. One of the most expensive films ever at the time of its release, the $70 million film eventually brought in over $150 million during its original theatrical release.

Table of contents
1 Cast, crew, and studio
2 Plot
3 Acclaim
4 Significance
5 Criticism
6 Trivia
7 Other films combining live action with animation
8 Errors
9 Cartoon characters that make cameo appearances
10 External links
11 References

Cast, crew, and studio

The live action sequences were directed by Robert Zemeckis, and the animated sequences were directed by Richard Williams and produced at his London animation studio. The film stars Bob Hoskins, Christopher Lloyd, Joanna Cassidy and the voice of Charles Fleischer. The screenplay was adapted by screenwriters Jeffrey Price and Peter S. Seaman from the 1981 novel Who Censored Roger Rabbit by Gary K. Wolf, and the music was composed by perennial Zemeckis film composer Alan Silvestri and performed by the London Symphony Orchestra. It was released by Buena Vista Distribution under its Touchstone Pictures division

Plot

Spoiler warning: Plot or ending details follow.

Marvin Acme, the owner of the Acme Company and of Toontown, has been murdered. All signs point to Roger Rabbit, a toon star at Maroon Cartoons, who had recently been shown evidence that Acme and Roger's wife Jessica Rabbit a sexy toon femme fatale (voiced by Kathleen Turner except for a song sung by Amy Irving), had been playing pattycake together (literally, not figuratively).

The only person who can help clear Roger's name is Eddie Valiant (Bob Hoskins), a washed-up, alcoholic detective who hates toons because his brother, Teddy, was murdered by a toon during a routine criminal investigation in Toontown years before (a piano was dropped on his head). Eddie reluctantly decides to help, and soon is shielding Roger from Judge Doom of the Toontown District Superior Court (Christopher Lloyd) and his "Toon Patrol" henchmen, the weasels.

This all occurs while the giant Cloverleaf Corporation, owned by Judge Doom, is plotting to buy out the interurban railway, the Pacific-Electric Red Car, and replace it with freeways (See also: General Motors streetcar conspiracy; National City Lines). With Acme dead and no will having been found, Toontown is in danger of being bulldozed in order to make way for the freeway.

Eddie and Roger are also trying to find the will of the late Marvin Acme, which purportedly gives ownership of Toontown to the toons. Judge Doom is also trying to find the will in order to dispose of it, so he can destroy Toontown and build his freeway, and make himself profit out of the deal. If any toons happen to get in his way, Judge Doom feels no qualms about subjecting them to the "dip": a mixture he concocted of acetone, benzene, and turpentine, and the only sure way to kill a toon. At least a few toons can be 'killed' by laughing to death, but this method merely turns them to angels, possibly to come back again, whereas Dip leaves no trace of the dead toon except for a gooey paint-like substance.

Eddie goes to the studios of Maroon Cartoons, Roger's employer, to help clear the rabbit's name. There he speaks to R.K. Maroon, who gets shot in the confrontation. Thinking the shooter is Jessica Rabbit, playing Roger as a patsy, Eddie chases the assassin all the way into Toontown, despite his trepidation after the death of his brother there years before. While in Toontown, Eddie discovers that the assassin was Judge Doom, who manages to kidnap Jessica, and later Roger so he can "dip" them.

In the film's climax, set in the Acme Warehouse, Judge Doom has a huge machine that spews "dip" and is trying to eradicate Roger and his wife Jessica with it. He plans to then use his "dip" vehicle to erase Toontown. To combat Doom's weasel henchmen, Eddie, the typically hard-nosed detective, plays a clown (not unexpected, as the audience has been shown a photo of him and his brother working for Ringling Brothers earlier in the film) causing the weasels to die of laughter. After the weasels are out of the way and during the final battle with Eddie, Judge Doom is revealed to be a toon after a steam-roller rolls over him and he reinflates himself. To Eddie's horror, Doom then reveals himself to be the toon that murdered Teddy. Just when it seems that Judge Doom will get the upper hand, Eddie uses a scissor-spring-loaded punch-glove mallet to knock open the drain valve on the "dip" machine, causing Judge Doom to be drenched with "dip" and melt away.

The police soon arrive, and realize that Judge Doom was responsible for the murders of both Maroon and Acme, though no one knows for sure who he was. Marvin Acme's will is found, and Toontown is handed over to the control of the toons, who all cheer and sing a chorus of "Smile, Darn Ya, Smile."

Acclaim

Although test screenings proved disastrous, Roger Rabbit opened to generally positive reviews on June 21 1988. Both Siskel and Ebert included the film as one of their ten favorite films of 1988, with Ebert calling it "sheer, enchanted entertainment from the first frame to the last - a joyous, giddy, goofy celebration" .

The movie won four Academy Awards for Best Effects, Sound Effects Editing, Best Effects, Visual Effects, Best Film Editing and a Special Award for Richard Williams for "animation direction and creation of the cartoon characters". It was nominated for Best Art Direction-Set Decoration, Best Cinematography and Best Sound.

Significance

Who Framed Roger Rabbit is seen as a landmark film that sparked a . The field of American animation had become lackluster and worn-out during the 1960s and 1970s, to the point where even giants in the field such as The Walt Disney Company were considering giving up on major animated productions. This expensive film (production cost of $50 million - a staggering amount for the time) was a major risk for the company, but one that paid off handsomely. It inspired other studios to dive back into the field of animation; it also made animation acceptable with the moviegoing public. After Roger Rabbit, interest in the history of animation exploded, and such legends in the field as Tex Avery, Chuck Jones, and even Ralph Bakshi were seen in a new light, receiving credit and acclaim from audiences worldwide.

Also interesting was despite Roger Rabbit being produced by Disney's Touchstone Pictures division (in association with Steven Spielberg's Amblin Entertainment), it also marked the first (and to date, the only) time that characters from several animation studios (from Universal to Republic, and from Turner Entertainment to Warner Bros) appeared in one film, most notably Bugs Bunny and Daffy Duck making their animation/live-action hybrid debut many years before Space Jam, and obviously, the first-ever meetings between Bugs and Mickey Mouse and between Daffy and Donald Duck.

The movie opens with a Roger Rabbit short subject. Eventually, several additional independent animated shorts featuring Roger Rabbit, Jessica Rabbit, and Baby Herman would be released. These shorts were presented in front of various Touchstone/Disney features in an attempt to revive short subject animation as a part of the moviegoing experience. These shorts include Tummy Trouble released in front of Honey, I Shrunk The Kids (this was included on the original video release of the film), Roller Coaster Rabbit shown in front of Dick Tracy and Trail Mix-Up shown in front of A Far Off Place. They were all released on video in 1996 on a tape called The Best of Roger Rabbit, and in 2003 on a special edition DVD of Who Framed Roger Rabbit. Tummy Trouble was produced at the main Walt Disney Feature Animation studio in Burbank, California; the other two shorts were produced at the satellite studio located at Disney-MGM Studios in Orlando, Florida.

Criticism

While Who Framed Roger Rabbit is considered a modern film classic, the film has also had its share of criticism. Much of the criticism revolves around the inconsistent tone of the film: the juxtaposition of the zany cartoon characters and the rough film noir story they appear in. While a blend between the two was the intended result of the producers, some people feel that the tone of the film deviates too much to properly identify it as either a film for children or a film for adults. While sex and violence were very prominent in Golden Age animation, the more blatant and saturated usage of such elements in this film, particularly in the characters of Jessica Rabbit (sex) and Judge Doom (violence), make many parents uncomfortable with allowing children to watch the film and cause discord among those who grew up watching (edited) versions of classic-era cartoons on television and wanted the film to evoke the same tone as the cartoons they grew up with, and those who felt that the death of a minor but harmless character violated the spirit of the original, unedited cartoons (that is, a deathless fantasy world of slapstick humor).

The film's finale, during which its main characters are essentially tied to a rope waiting to be sprayed by a hose, was cited as being weak and unimaginative (Gray).

The film's animation is also accused of using too much superfluous movement. Held cels are very rarely used in Roger Rabbit, and most of the animation is on "ones" (each frame is animated, as opposed to the cheaper, more familiar method of animating every other frame, i.e. "twos"). Even when characters are standing still, they continue to move (particularly Roger, whose ear movements were based upon ballet patterns), and some animators and animation artists have cited the extra movement as unnecessary and distracting.

Trivia

Other films combining live action with animation

Audiences were amazed by the ground-breaking special effects used in Who Framed Roger Rabbit to create a "realistic" portrayal of the interaction of animated characters and live actors. While the film did this with more advanced technology than previous films, the combination of animation and live action had been practised since the beginnings of animated cartoons, often to very good effect.

The tradition goes back all the way to the earliest days of animation with Winsor McCay's short Gertie the Dinosaur, which shows a live-action narrator (specifically, a "live" actor, instead of a filmed one) interacting with an animated landscape and character (Gertie). In one scene, the narrator appears to throw a real orange which is caught by Gertie (the real orange is replaced by an animated one just as it leaves the narrator's hand), and the film climaxes with a scene in which the narrator enters the animated landscape (again, replaced by an animated version) and takes a ride on the famous dinosaur's back.

In the later days of silent film, the popular cartoons of Max Fleischer included a series where his cartoon character Koko the Clown interacted with the live world; for example, having a boxing match with a live kitten. In a variation on this concept, Walt Disney's first directorial efforts (years before Mickey Mouse was born) were the animated Alice Comedies short cartoons, in which a young live-action girl named Alice interacted with animated cartoon characters.

In the era of sound film, the 1940 Warner Bros cartoon You Ought To Be In Pictures, directed by Friz Freleng, can be seen as a predecessor to Roger Rabbit. The animated sequence in the 1945 film Anchors Aweigh in which Gene Kelly dances with an animated Jerry Mouse is one of the actor's most famous scenes.

The Disney Studio mixed live-action and animation in several notable films (which are primarily considered live-action):

There were also many previous films combining live action with stop motion animation using back projection, such as the films of Willis O'Brien and Ray Harryhausen.

With the commercial and technological success of Who Framed Roger Rabbit, a slew of live action/animated films followed. Cool World, released in 1992, was a critical and commercial failure. Space Jam, the 1996 film debut of Michael Jordan featuring Bugs Bunny, was a commercial success. The Warner Brothers characters returned to reality for in 2003. The Adventures of Rocky and Bullwinkle (2000) and Monkeybone (2001) were also critical and commercial failures.

Errors

Cartoon characters that make cameo appearances

External links

References

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