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Who Framed Roger Rabbit | Full Length Reaction!

So WHO FRAMED HIM??? Omg I finally watched the classic because of you guys. YOU GUYS DONT MISS WITH THE RECOMMENDATIONS😭💖 LOVEEEEEEED this movie thank you guys for choosing it. Love you guys as well! :)

I watched this on Disney+. Let me know your thoughts in the comments!! :)

Most importantly, thank you for your continued support on Patreon💖


Who Framed Roger Rabbit | Full Length Reaction!

Comments

You totally have to watch Corridor Crews VFX artists overfview of this movie. They go deep into how the toons were so realistically mixed in with and interacted with the real actors.

FireGamer95

There's some amazing behind the scenes stuff that show how they made this thing work. A lot of really clever rigs and some painstakingly hand drawn animation to cover the rigs while still getting the cartoon movement they wanted.

Kevin Bartelen

Fun reaction Vee, and I believe that new emotion you felt was 'uncanny valley' which is the 'sense of unease or even revulsion in response to humanoid robots that are highly realistic' or in this case a reanimated dead Christopher Lloyd :)

MenuMitch

Regarding Kathleen Turner, I'd like to add her film debut in writer/director Lawrence Kasdan's "Body Heat" (1981), a steamy film noir.

ButtercupsTrueLove

Been awhile since I saw this. I'll watch it soon. V, I am sure this good-time feel-good movie is just what you need after some of that BrBa :o : )

MertzRocks

There are quite a few people out there that rate this movie very high in all significant aspects. Obviously the technical aspect of bringing the toons to life and have humans interact with them in a believable way is astonishing. But the storytelling is great as well. The famous shot when Eddy comes home and gets drunk and the camera floats once around the table is awesome. Maybe you didn't notice, but it realy is one shot and everything that changes had to be done while the cam goes once around the table. They switch from night to day (without interrupting the light where the cam is pointing), change Eddys cloth and position and all these details. And they tell so much with what they show on the table. And the best thing: If you just watch the movie without thinking about such things, you wont even notice the brilliance. In newer movies the most often point to what they think is great about it. Here the art is in the background and in the overall skill in every part of it. So many people seem to think great cinema has to be about drama and tragedy and such, but here they make a buddy-comedy about a cartoon rabbit and they blow these artsy show-offs out of the water. I love it!

Dioskur

Your perspective is correct, just like Toy Story is about toys 30 years earlier, wreck it Ralph is about video games 30 years earlier, Roger Rabbit does the same thing

zynjams

Don't be knocking 80's films, lol, tons of "greatest films ever" are 80's flicks! If you love this, I'm telling ya, Dick Tracy is right up your alley. Bar food has definitely changed over the years, lol. So the hard boiled egg in the bar scene, its 1947, WW2 ended 2 years ago, traditional bar food today is peanuts and pretzels, easy to get today, not so easy in 1947, what was easy was eggs. Tons of local farmers near every city. Also, the adults of 1947, were kids during the great depression, a time when knowing how to perserve food and pinch a penny was a meal ticket. A common snack food found in many pockets of your blue collars workers, was hard boiled eggs, easy to make, and last the day pretty easy without refrigeration. But an even more common bar food, and still is today in bars off the beaten path, so to speak, is that you would often see a large jar of pickled eggs or p;pickled pigs feet at one of the bar. Now, I know it sounds gross, but think about it. Pickles only taste like pickles because of all the vinegar, but what about flavoring the pickles with sugar, which was often done. My grandma use to make pickled red hots. Just cucumber slices, pickled in vinegar and sugar and a ton of cinnamon with a dash of red food dye. Pickled candy, basically. I used to make a jar of pickled hard boiled eggs only I would use eel sauce instead of vinegar. Some use use soy sauce or teriyaki sauce (which is just soy sauce with sugar). Eel sauce is just teriyaki sauce with even more sugar, lol. Great snack to take to work. Pickled eggs are a great bar snack back then because they last an extremely long time and you can make them yourself instead ordering from distributors. People just think they look gross, today, which is why you don't see it anymore. Oddly enough, the pickled eggs are even cleaner than a bowl of nuts today because they are swimming in vinegar, where a bowl of nuts or pretzels have been sitting out with who knows how many dirty hands (drunk people that don't wash their hands after peeing from all the beer) touching it all night. Pickled eggs are at least swimming in an edible antibacterial fluid all day. Just remember, in 1947, plastics were no where near what they are today. No sandwich bags or seran wrap. So a pocket hard boiled egg for the road was a good low income trick. Bob Hoskins was a brilliant physical actor. One of the many film tricks they used in making this film was Bob Hoskins himself. In the scenes where he is handcuffed to Roger, Bob would flex his wrist in whatever angle needed in order to angle with Roger's movements. The handcuffs aren't CGI, they're real and Bob is the one moving them around. Kathleen Turner, voice of Jessica Rabbit, one the sexiest voices of the 80's and 90's brought Jessica Rabbit to life, absolutely amazing. Great films of hers are Romancing the Stone, Jewel of the Nile (the sequel to Romancing the Stone), The Man with Two Brains, and Serial Mom. If you want to see another film with a mix of cartoon and live action there is also Cool World.

Raptor

V, this was a fun rewatch! I'm so glad you were just as weirded out by Judge Doom at the end as me and all the kids in 1988 who were scarred for life when we saw this. It's still amazing to me that Disney and Warner Bros somehow managed to let both of their IPs appear in the same movie, giving us one of the most truly unique movies of its time. Thanks for posting!

B.H. Hosford

Nice; glad you enjoyed it!

Bryan Tuck

This was a fun watch! To this day, whenever I'm at a party and there's dip, I say "ohhh myyyyy goddd It's DIIIPPPPPP!" It's fun to see who gets the reference, that's who I hang out with. :)

Chester Beals

I'm not baaaad, I'm just drawn that way!

Raztaban

I honestly love this movie. It holds so much nostalgia for me. I always loved watching it as a kid especially during scenes where WB and Disney characters appeared together. It’s still so surreal to see Mickey Mouse and Bugs Bunny on screen together. Eddie is honestly one of my favorite movie characters. Judge Doom was also such a terrifying villain. Bob Hoskins and Christopher Lloyd are both fantastic in this movie. I’m so glad you finally got to this one. It’s a classic for a reason. :)

Adam Grunther


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