Sale!

Roger »ToonMe »

Original price was: $675.00.Current price is: $625.00.

Blanc de Blancs Brut 75cl Bottle

The blend of Chardonnay from old vines of the prestigious Côte des Blancs has allowed our house

to offer a Cuvée BLANC DE BLANCS. This champagne has a brilliant light gold color with silver highlights.

The fine and elegant effervescence offers floral tones of ripe white fruits and a hint of pastry on the nose.

The palate is balanced thanks to delicate notes of citrus and stone fruits, such as vineyard peach, evolving into toasted notes, characteristic of the Chardonnay grape variety. Pair with scallops, Comté cheese, or a creamy shellfish risotto.

Description

Who Framed Roger Rabbit is a 1988 American fantasy comedy film directedby Robert Zemeckis from a screenplay written by Jeffrey Price and Peter S. Seaman.

The film stars Bob HoskinsChristopher LloydStubby Kaye, and Joanna Cassidy, along with the voices of Charles Fleischer and an uncredited Kathleen Turner. Combining live-action and animation, the film is set in an alternate history Hollywood in 1947, where humans and cartoon characters (referred to as « toons ») co-exist. Its plot follows Eddie Valiant, a private investigator with a grudge against toons, who must help exonerate Roger Rabbit, a toon framed for murder.

Walt Disney Pictures purchased the film rights for the story in 1981. Price and Seaman wrote two drafts of the script before Disney brought in executive producer Steven Spielberg and his production company, Amblin Entertainment. Zemeckis was brought on to direct, and Canadian animator Richard Williams was hired to supervise the animation sequences. Production was moved from Los Angeles to Elstree Studios in England to accommodate Williams and his group of animators. While filming, the production budget rapidly expanded, and the shooting schedule ran longer than expected.

Who Framed Roger Rabbit was released through Disney’s Touchstone Pictures banner in the United States on June 22, 1988. The film received critical acclaim for its visuals, humor, writing, performances, and groundbreaking combination of live-action and animation. It grossed over $351 million worldwide, becoming the second-highest-grossing film of 1988, behind Rain Man. It brought a renewed interest in the golden age of American animation, spearheading modern American animation and the Disney Renaissance.

It won three Academy Awards for Best Film EditingBest Sound Effects Editing and Best Visual Effects and received a Special Achievement Academy Award for Williams’ animation direction.

In 2016, the film was selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry by the Library of Congress as « culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant »

In 1947 Los Angeles, animated cartoon characters, or « toons« , co-exist with humans, often employing their skills to entertain as film stars. Private detective Eddie Valiant, once a staunch ally of the toons alongside his brother and co-worker Teddy, has become a depressed alcoholic following Teddy’s murder by an unknown toon five years earlier. Maroon Cartoon Studios owner R.K. Maroon, upset about the recent poor performance of his toon star Roger Rabbit, hires Eddie to investigate rumors that Roger’s glamorous toon wife, Jessica, is having an affair with Marvin Acme, owner of both the Acme Corporation and Toontown, the animated metropolis in which toons reside.

After watching Jessica perform at The Ink and Paint Club, Eddie secretly photographs her and Acme playing patty-cake. He shows the pictures to Roger, who becomes distraught and flees, refusing to believe Jessica was unfaithful.

The next morning, Acme is found murdered and evidence at the scene implicates Roger as a suspect. Eddie meets Judge Doom, the sinister human judge of Toontown—having bribed the electorate to gain their votes—and his five weasel minions, the Toon Patrol. Doom confirms he plans to execute Roger using the « Dip », a chemical concoction of acetonebenzene, and turpentine which is capable of destroying the otherwise invulnerable toons.

Roger’s toon co-star, Baby Herman, suggests to Eddie that Acme’s missing will—which supposedly bequeaths Toontown to the toons—may have been the killer’s true motive. Eddie returns to his office and finds Roger waiting. Roger insists he has been framed and Eddie reluctantly agrees to help after finding evidence of Acme’s will; he hides Roger in a bar tended by his girlfriend, Dolores. Jessica tells Eddie that Maroon threatened Roger’s career unless she posed for the compromising photos. Meanwhile, Dolores’s research uncovers that Cloverleaf Industries recently bought the city’s Pacific Electric railway system and will purchase Toontown at midnight unless Acme’s will is found. Doom and the Toon Patrol find Roger, but he and Eddie escape with help from Benny, a toon taxi cab. Sheltering in a local movie theater, Eddie sees a newsreel of Maroon selling his studio to Cloverleaf.

While Eddie goes to the studio to interrogate Maroon, Jessica abducts Roger. Maroon denies involvement in Acme’s murder, admitting he intended to blackmail Acme into selling his company as otherwise Cloverleaf would not buy the studio. Maroon is assassinated and Eddie spots Jessica fleeing the scene. Assuming she is the assailant, he reluctantly follows her into Toontown, choosing to discard the last of his alcohol. After saving Eddie from being shot by Doom, Jessica reveals her actions were to ensure Roger’s safety and it was Doom who killed Acme and Maroon. Acme gave his will to Jessica for safety but, when she examined it, the paper was blank.

Doom and the Toon Patrol capture Jessica and Eddie, bringing them to Acme’s factory. Doom reveals he is the sole shareholder of Cloverleaf and plans to erase Toontown with a Dip-spraying machine so he can build a freeway in its place, and decommission the railway system to force people to use it. When Roger unsuccessfully attempts to save Jessica, the couple is tied onto a hook in front of the machine’s sprayer. Eddie distracts the weasels by performing a comedic vaudeville act full of pratfalls, causing them to die of laughter before he kicks their leader into the Dip.

Doom is flattened by a steamroller while fighting with Eddie, but he survives, revealing he is actually a disguised toon and Teddy’s murderer. Struggling against Doom’s toon abilities, Eddie empties the machine’s Dip supply, spraying and dissolving Doom to death. The machine crashes through the wall into Toontown, where it is destroyed by a passenger train.

As police and toons gather at the scene, Eddie realizes that Acme’s will was written on the blank paper in temporarily invisible ink, confirming the toons inherit Toontown. Having regained his sense of humor, Eddie happily enters Toontown alongside Dolores, Roger, Jessica, and the toons.

Reviews

There are no reviews yet.

Be the first to review “Roger »ToonMe »”

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *