Who Framed Roger Rabbit
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Download Who Framed Roger Rabbit
| DVD ($4.99) | DivX ($2.99) | PDA ($1.99) |
Video Information
|
DOWNLOAD "WHO FRAMED ROGER RABBIT"! Full movie is only $4.99 No additional software or browser plug-ins required! All downloads are available instantly. You can play movies for unlimited number of times whenever you want. Downloaded movies will work perfectly on any PC, DVD player, PDA, iPod or iPhone etc. You will be able to burn downloaded files on a CD or DVD. |
Who Framed Roger Rabbit Storyline
Who Framed Roger Rabbit movie taglines:
| 1: It's the story of a man, a woman, and a rabbit in a triangle of trouble. |
Who Framed Roger Rabbit movie plot:
In Robert Zemeckis’s trailblazing combination of animation and live-action, Hollywood’s 1940s cartoon stars are a subjugated minority, living in the ghettolike “Toontown” where their movements are sharply monitored by the human power establishment. The Toons are permitted to perform in a Cotton Club-style nightspot but are forbidden to patronize the joint. One of Toontown’s leading citizens, whacked-out Roger Rabbit, is framed for the murder of human nightclub owner Marvin Acme (Stubby Kaye). Private detective Eddie Valiant (Bob Hoskins), whose prejudice against Toons stems from the time that his brother was killed by a falling cartoon piano, reluctantly agrees to clear Roger of the accusation. Most of the sociopolitical undertones of the original novel were weeded out out of the 1988 film version, with emphasis shifted to its basic “evil land developer” plotline –and, more enjoyably, to a stream of eye-popping special effects. With the combined facilities of animator Richard Williams, Disney, Warner Bros., Steven Spielberg’s Amblin Entertainment, and George Lucas’s Industrial Light and Magic, the film allows us to believe (at least for 90 minutes) that “toons” exist, and that they are capable of interacting with 3-dimensional human beings. Virtually every major cartoon character of the late 1940s shows up, with the exceptions of Felix the Cat and Popeye the Sailor, whose licensees couldn’t come to terms with the producers. Of the film’s newly minted Toons, the most memorable is Roger Rabbit’s curvaceous bride Jessica (voiced, uncredited, by Kathleen Turner). The human element is well-represented by Hoskins, Christopher Lloyd, and Joanna Cassidy; also watch for action-film producer Joel Silver as Roger Rabbit’s Tex Avery-style director.
Who Framed Roger Rabbit movie keywords:
Download Movies
The Hangover
Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen
I Love You, Man
Fifty Dead Men Walking
He's Just Not That Into You
Land of the Lost
International, The
X-Men Origins: Wolverine
Terminator Salvation
Night at the Museum 2: Battle of the Smithsonian
Push
Angels & Demons
Fast & Furious 4
Fired Up
Coraline
Star Trek
Confessions of a Shopaholic
Paul Blart: Mall Cop
17 Again
Monsters vs. Aliens
Marley & Me
Role Models
Twilight
Gran Torino
Underworld: Rise of the Lycans
Taken
Bedtime Stories
Slumdog Millionaire
Ghosts of Girlfriends Past, The
Valkyrie
Journal of a Contract Killer





