Who Framed Roger Rabbit

Synopsis: Who Framed Roger Rabbit is a 1988 American fantasy comedy crime film directed by Robert Zemeckis, produced by Frank Marshall and Robert Watts, and written by Jeffrey Price and Peter S. Seaman. The film is based on Gary K. Wolf's 1981 novel Who Censored Roger Rabbit? The film stars Bob Hoskins, Christopher Lloyd, Charles Fleischer, Stubby Kaye, and Joanna Cassidy. Combining live-action and animation, the film is set in Hollywood during the late 1940s in an alternative timeline where animated characters really exist. The story follows Eddie Valiant, a private detective who must exonerate "Toon" Roger Rabbit, who is accused of murdering a wealthy businessman.
Production: Buena Vista Distribution Compa
  Won 3 Oscars. Another 21 wins & 21 nominations.
 
IMDB:
7.7
Metacritic:
83
Rotten Tomatoes:
97%
PG
Year:
1988
104 min
1,052 Views


FADE IN:

ON A "MAROON CARTOON"

Accompanied by zany CARTOON MUSIC, the TITLE CARD reads:

MAROON CARTOONS PRESENT

BABY HERMAN AND ROGER RABBIT

IN:

"THE BUNNYSITTER"

Below are two cameos of the cartoon's stars. One picture is

of a cherubic baby in a bonnet innocently posed with his

thumb in his mouth. The other is of a paunchy rabbit with a

gap between his front teeth. He has a loveable, if slightly

shell-shocked look. The cartoon begins...

BABY HERMAN AND ROGER RABBIT

are in a playpen when TWO FEMALE LEGS in high heels walk INTO

FRAME. The VOICE belonging to the legs talks down to Baby

Herman in a maternal coo.

VOICE (O.S.)

Mommy's going to the beauty parlor,

darling. But I'm leaving you with your

favorite friend, Roger. He's going to

take very, very good care of you...

(voice turns

ominous)

... cause if he doesn't, he's going

back to the science lab!

Roger gulps as he watches the legs disappear. We HEAR

FOOTSTEPS recede and a DOOR SLAM. Roger turns confidently

back to his charge. But the little tyke is already squeezing

through the playpen bars.

BABY HERMAN:

Baby bye-bye...

Roger makes a dive for him, misses, and gets his head stuck

between the bars. He pleads with the Baby in a voice that

resonates of Huntz Hall in "The Bowery Boys".

ROGER RABBIT:

Hey, come back! You heard what your

mother said!

BABY HERMAN:

ignores Roger. We FOLLOW HIM as he crawls into the kitchen.

He stops to regard something that has caught his attention...

a cookie jar. It's sitting on top of the refrigerator.

BABY HERMAN:

Coo-kie.

ROGER:

wearing the playpen like a pillory, comes running toward the

kitchen. But the playpen is too wide to clear the door. The

impact SHATTERING the playpen and sends Roger sprawling

across the kitchen floor. When he looks up...

BABY HERMAN:

is swinging precariously on the door of the freeer.

ROGER RABBIT:

Hang on, Baby. I'll save you!

Roger makes a desperate leap across the kitchen for the kid.

But Baby Herman swings the door to the freezer open and Roger

disappears inside. Baby Herman grabs a cookie and swings

back, shutting the door. He climbs down and crawls out of

the kitchen. After a beat, the freezer door opens.

ROGER:

now shaped like a block of ice, falls out and hits the floor.

The block SHATTERS into ice cubes. Roger looks around,

dazed.

BABY HERMAN:

has taken this opportunity to crawl out the window. Roger

races to the window. His eyes pop out of his head at what he

sees.

ROGER'S POV

Baby Herman is crawling along the sidewalk under the shadow

of a safe being hoisted into a second floor window by the

Acme Safe Moving Company. The rope holding the safe is

fraying down to a slender thread.

ROGER:

gasps and rockets out the window toward Baby Herman. The

rope snaps. The safe falls. Roger arrives just in time to

pluck the Baby out of harm's way. But not in time to save

himself. The safe CRUNCHES down on his head, burying Roger

into the sidewalk. After a beat, Roger's hand appears and

spins the tumbler. The safe door opens. Inside, we see the

dazed rabbit with little TWEETING BIRDS circling his head.

VOICE (O.S.)

Cut, cut, cut!

The cartoon action stops abruptly, but the goofy CARTOON

MUSIC PLAYS ON. We begin a slow PULL BACK TO REVEAL that

this cartoon is being filmed LIVE ON A SOUND STAGE. The

title card sits on an easle. The female legs are paper

mache' props manipulated by two HUMAN CREW MEMBERS. Wearily,

they lean the legs up against the stage wall. A human

DIRECTOR, wearing a tweed jacket and baggy pleated pants,

steps onto the set. From the equipment and the dress of the

crew, we can tell it's the 1940's. Baby Herman throws his

cookie down in disgust. He talks in a gravelly voice an

octave lower than Wallace Beery's.

BABY HERMAN:

What the hell was wrong with that

take??

DIRECTOR:

Nothin' with you, Baby Herman. It's on

Roger... again!

(over shoulder)

Hey! Could we lose the playback?

The MUSIC suddenly STOPS as, off to the side, the SOUNDMAN

lifts the needle off a phonograph record. The Director leans

over Roger and angrily plucks one of the birds circling his

head.

DIRECTOR:

(continuing)

What's this, Roger?

ROGER RABBIT:

(sheepish)

A tweeting bird?

DIRECTOR:

That's right, a tweeting bird. But

what does the script say? 'Rabbit gets

conked. Rabbit sees stars!' Not

birds, stars!

BABY HERMAN:

Aw, for cryin' out loud, Roger! I'll

be in my trailer... takin' a nap!

Baby Herman pulls himself up to his full height of two feet

and walks off the set. He chooses a route that takes him

under the dress of the SCRIPT GIRL. She jumps as if goosed.

Now two CREW MEMBERS lift the safe off Roger.

ROGER RABBIT:

Please, Raoul. I can give you stars,

I know I can. Just drop the safe on my

head one more time.

DIRECTOR:

I've already dropped it on you

twenty-three times.

ROGER RABBIT:

Don't worry about me. I can take it.

DIRECTOR:

I'm not worried about you. I'm worried

about the safe.

CONTINUED PULLBACK.

What we've been seeing has been from the POV of a MAN in a

shiny brown suit standing unobtrusively at the back of the

sound stage. Under a beat-up fedora is a craggy face that's

seen a lot in its life... but apparently didn't think much of

it was funny. EDDIE VALIANT takes a jolt from a pint of

whiskey, evidently in reaction to what he's seen. He opens

his coat and returns the pint bottle to a shoulder holster

which had formerly held a .38. Nerves steadied, he walks out

the stage door.

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Peter S. Seaman

Peter S. Seaman was born in 1951. He is a writer and producer, known for Shrek the Third (2007), Who Framed Roger Rabbit (1988) and How the Grinch Stole Christmas (2000). more…

All Peter S. Seaman scripts | Peter S. Seaman Scripts

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