Roger Rabbit short films
The Roger Rabbit shorts are a series of three live-action/animated short films produced by Walt Disney Feature Animation from 1989 to 1993. They feature Roger Rabbit, the animated protagonist from Who Framed Roger Rabbit, being enlisted to care for Baby Herman while his mother is absent, resulting in a plot defined by slapstick humor and visual gags. Each short concludes with a sequence involving live-action and animation, in which the characters interact with live-action human beings, akin to the 1988 film. Droopy Dog from MGM makes a cameo in all of the shorts.
Charles Fleischer, Kathleen Turner, Lou Hirsch, and April Winchell returned to reprise their voice roles from the film, alongside producers Steven Spielberg, Kathleen Kennedy, Frank Marshall, and Don Hahn. Marshall also directed the live-action segments in the first two shorts, while Industrial Light & Magic was responsible for the live-action visual effects. Produced in association with Spielberg's Amblin Entertainment, the three shorts were originally attached to the theatrical releases of several Disney and Amblin films. A fourth short, Hare in My Soup, was cancelled during pre-production, with three more in the planning stages also cancelled.
Despite being produced by Walt Disney Animation, these shorts heavily contained a similar slapstick style to Warner Bros. Looney Tunes or Tex Avery cartoons, and MGM character Droopy made cameos in every one.
''Tummy Trouble''
Plot
Roger is placed in charge of watching Baby Herman when his mother needs to step out for an hour; as soon as she leaves, Herman breaks into a heavy crying fit, which Roger doesn't seem to be able to break until he pulls out a bright shiny rattle, which immediately garners Herman's attention. After a brief second of shaking it, Herman swallows the rattle, prompting Roger to panic, call 911, and rush the baby to the emergency room. Roger is overcome with guilt when he visits, but quickly realizes Herman wants to drink from a milk bottle in the room; after Roger burps Herman, he hiccups the rattle, but finds that in Roger's joyous celebration, he accidentally swallows it, causing Baby Herman to become upset that he lost his toy. Roger begins to dance, his hips rattling to the toy, giving Baby Herman some amusement, but is stunned when a doctor bursts in, mistakes him for Baby Herman, and preps him for emergency surgery.While Roger is gone, Herman spies Jessica pushing a cart of milk bottles and gives chase, eventually following a runaway milk bottle into the emergency room, where Roger is strapped to the table while the surgeons have disappeared for a lunch break. Herman mistakes a large surgical laser for a bottle and climbs up onto it, nearly dissecting Roger in the process. The laser detaches itself from the ceiling and flings a table of scalpels and hypodermic needles at Roger, who avoids them but is electrocuted in the process. The laser flies around the room and lodges itself under Roger's stretcher and sends him and Herman both ejecting from the emergency room and causing Roger to gag up the rattle, and when Baby Herman to again swallow it before crashing into a wheelchair, they then fly down the hall and into an open elevator shaft due to wet floors causing the wheelchair they landed on to skid out of control. Baby Herman's diaper parachutes him safely to the floor, while Roger gets crushed by an elevator where Droopy is, while trying to catch Herman. Eventually, they end up in a room with piles of gas pumps, which ignite and send them, the pair, launching miles into the air. As they fall, Herman coughs up the rattle, and Roger swallows it again. As they crash back into the hospital, Roger crashes through several floors before landing smack down on the receptionist floor in the hospital. As he recovers, Baby Herman lands on Roger, causing him to cough up the rattle again, finally ending their adventure. But when Roger's celebration is short-lived, he sees the bill for their rampant destruction and faints, realizing he didn't win again. Herman then crawls over to the rattle, and as the screen fades to black, there is a gulping sound as he again swallows the rattle.
During the end credits, however, Herman spits the rattle out and angrily threatens more trouble if he has to swallow the rattle again. After attempting to cool Baby Herman down, Roger is greeted by Jessica, who seductively suggests they go home and play a little patty cake, in which a love-stricken Roger coos as they walk off.
Voice cast
- Charles Fleischer as Roger Rabbit
- Kathleen Turner as Jessica Rabbit
- Lou Hirsch as Baby Herman
- April Winchell as Mrs. Herman and Baby Herman's baby talk
- Richard Williams as Droopy
- Corey Burton as the surgeons
Live-action cast
- Sol Pavlovsky as Raoul J. Raoul
- Charles Noland and William Bronder as sign carriers
Production
Droopy's line, "Gruesome, isn't it?" was an outtake from the original film.
The short was released theatrically with Walt Disney Pictures' Honey, I Shrunk the Kids and on that film's initial video release. An adaptation of this short appeared in the graphic novel Roger Rabbit: The Resurrection of Doom.
''Roller Coaster Rabbit''
Plot
Roger Rabbit, Baby Herman and Mrs. Herman are at the local county fair. Mrs. Herman leaves to get her palm read by a fortune teller and asks Roger to watch Baby Herman until she gets back. She also reminds him not to mess it up again. Roger reluctantly watches Baby Herman. Baby Herman loses his red balloon and bursts into tears when Roger goes to get him a new one. Before he returns, however, Baby Herman sees another red balloon at a dart game and goes to try to get it. When Roger comes back to give Baby Herman his balloon, he finds him gone and sets off as the chase begins. First, Baby Herman finds himself following the balloon into a field where a grazing bull is. Roger soon follows the youngster and falls into a pile of bull dung. Baby Herman walks directly underneath the bull. He notices a round balloon-like object and grasps it; unknown to him, it is in fact the bull's scrotum. The grazing creature snaps. Roger picks up Baby Herman, but just happens to be looking the bull in the eyes. The animal hurls Roger and Baby Herman into the air, sending them flying out of the field and causing them to crash into a roller coaster carriage which is slowly traveling up.In the next stage of this short, the carriage continues to climb a tall hill on the track. The two reach the top of the drop, which is exaggerated to reach beyond the clouds and into space. Roger looks down and sees the world. Moments later, the carriage drops down thousands of meters. The speed of the drop is maintained throughout the remainder of the chase. After a few twists and turns, a shot of Jessica appears, where she is tied down to the tracks, unable to move. She calls out to be saved before Roger and Baby Herman's carriage crushes her. As the cart draws near, it topples over and fortunately bounces over Jessica, avoiding her completely. The camera moves along, and beside her appears Droopy for a quick one-liner. The story then continues. Roger grasps Baby Herman, tumbling and losing their carriage, leaving Roger sliding along the tracks on his feet, gradually gaining friction, causing his feet to catch fire. The tracks run into a dark tunnel and then stumble across a 'wrong way sign'. Finally, Herman and Roger crash through the sign and into a live-action filming studio, a direct reference to the reality/cartoon crossover in the feature film when Roger ruins the film and refuses to re-shoot the whole scene. As the credits finish rolling, Baby Herman says he cannot take any more of Roger, and a woman gives him a balloon, which he pops with his cigar.
Voice cast
- Charles Fleischer as Roger Rabbit
- Kathleen Turner as Jessica Rabbit
- Lou Hirsch as Baby Herman
- April Winchell as Mrs. Herman and Baby Herman's baby talk
- Corey Burton as Droopy
- Frank Welker as the Bull
- Charlie Adler as the men's voice-overs
Live-action cast
- Damian London as Fritz
- Joni Barnes as secretary
- Jim Bracken as a cameraman
- Ancel Cook as a fireman
Production
The short originally had a gag where Roger and Baby Herman would have reached the top of the roller coaster's lift hill and been paused by an intersection with a traffic light. At this point, a "Long Car" was to have zoomed through the intersection in front of them, ridden by Disney characters, including Mickey Mouse, Minnie Mouse, Monstro from Pinocchio and Chernabog from Fantasia. The gag was eventually cut due to timing issues, as the characters would not be recognizable to the audience if the car went too fast and the momentum would be lost if it went too slow.
Spielberg wanted the short to appear with Arachnophobia, Hollywood Pictures' first feature and a co-production between Disney and Amblin. However, CEO Michael Eisner opted to release the short with the US theatrical release of Touchstone Pictures' Dick Tracy, in hopes that the short would increase awareness of the film. Spielberg, who controlled a 50% ownership stake in the character, decided to cancel Hare in My Soup, the third short that had entered production.
Roller Coaster Rabbit is the only Roger Rabbit short to be rated "PG" due to some risqué humor.
''Trail Mix-Up''
Plot
The short features Roger Rabbit, Baby Herman and Mrs. Herman at the park setting up camp. Mrs. Herman plans to go hunting and leaves Roger in charge of watching Baby Herman. Trouble begins when Baby Herman wanders into the forest's dangers, and Roger has to save him, leading to multiple calamities, such as Roger panicking at the sight of a caterpillar and spraying so much insecticide that many trees die. Later, when Roger reads the nutrition label on the box, Baby Herman follows a bee up to a beehive and goes to get some honey when Roger tries to save him. The beehive falls on Roger's head, stinging him multiple times. The bees proceed to chase him, so Roger runs into a lake, where he panics at the sight of a shark's dorsal fin.Later, Baby Herman follows a beaver, and is followed by Roger, who pursues them. Baby Herman follows the beaver up a pile of logs, and is pursued by Roger, who follows, only to have the log that Baby Herman and the beaver are on taken to the sawmill. This ends up with Roger being shredded by a sawmill. It ends up with the logs being thrown down a log flume, eventually landing in a river. The log, Roger, Baby Herman, and the beaver are on, crashes into a bear, who also ends up on the log. Then the four fell off a waterfall. Roger's head gets stuck in a twig sticking out of the waterfall, and when he catches Baby Herman, the bear grabs onto Roger's legs. The combined weight rebounds, sending all four flying, landing on a large boulder.
The boulder rolls down a hill, knocking over a tree trunk and then flying off a cliff. Eventually, Roger, the bear, the log, the beaver, the boulder, and Baby Herman all land on top of Old Predictable Geyser in that order. Then, Old Predictable Geyser erupts, sending Roger, Herman, the Bear, the Beaver, the boulder and the log flying out of the studio, passing the Hollywood Sign. The group flies over half the country, all the way to Mount Rushmore, and crashes into the mountain, destroying all the carvings of the presidents. Everyone is battered and beaten ; as they walk away, Baby Herman yells at Roger for destroying a "national monument." Roger retorts that it's "not as if it's the end of the world," but then sticks a US flag in the ground, which punctures the Earth, making it deflate and blow away like a balloon.
Cast
- Charles Fleischer as Roger Rabbit
- Kathleen Turner as Jessica Rabbit
- Lou Hirsch as Baby Herman
- April Winchell as Mrs. Herman and Baby Herman's baby talk
- Corey Burton as Droopy
- Frank Welker as the Bear and Beaver
Additional cast
- Alice Playten as the Bee
- John Kassir as Mount Rushmore
Production
Due to being housed in trailers, the crew working on the short took liberties with inside jokes, such as including cameo appearances of Mickey Mouse, Tinker Bell, the Genie from Aladdin, Evinrude from The Rescuers, background artist and art director Ric Sluiter and the boy from Off His Rockers ; naming Roger's insecticide after Minkoff, and giving Baby Herman Mickey-shaped irises and Roger skull and crossbones-shaped ones in the sawmill scene. Jeffrey Katzenberg wanted the scene with Jessica cut, but Cook convinced him to keep it and warned animators not to show the buttons on Jessica's uniform to avoid them being mistaken for nipples. The Mount Rushmore presidents' destruction was achieved by blowing up a large sculptured miniature, constructed by Bob Spurlock and his crew from Stetson Visual Services at Golden Oak Ranch.
The short was released theatrically with Disney/Amblin's A Far Off Place on March 12, 1993.