Budget
$70,000,000 (estimated)
Gross US & Canada
$156,452,370
Opening weekend US & Canada
$11,226,239
Gross worldwide
$329,803,958
Budget
$70,000,000 (estimated)
Gross US & Canada
$156,452,370
Opening weekend US & Canada
$11,226,239
Gross worldwide
$329,803,958
Movie reviews
( 21 )
Add reviews
By Crawford 2022-03-15 09:01:02
The ending is a bit surprising
I finally saw this landmark first animated live-action composite film. Robert Zemeckis is indeed a master of innovation. I still don't quite understand how the composite effect was made. At that time, there was no computer processing. Cut with scissors? Or are the two films overlapping? Anyway, the effect seems to be combined very well, especially when I like to see the feeling of animated characters holding three-dimensional objects, it is a two-dimensional animation, it is really a bold...
By Jasen 2022-03-15 09:01:02
Classic cartoon live-action historical photos
Twenty years have passed. Finally watched it once. There are many familiar cartoon characters in it. Bugs Bunny, Mickey Mouse, Donald Duck and more. Not yet a year old, then.
But it's not that simple.
It tells a conspiracy, a little suspenseful: a handful of perverted terrorists trying to kill happiness, a handful of people with ulterior motives. Much like the black-and-white films from decades ago, it's thrilling.
Exaggerated and funny. Roger wants to bring...
By Jorge 2022-03-14 14:12:22
The pioneering work of live action and animation
In 1988, half of China at that time had never seen what a computer looked like. Americans on the other side of the ocean used computers to complete something that seemed impossible at the time.
As the pioneering work of combining live action and animation, this film won A lot of applause is also worthy of the excellent results of the box office runner-up that year.
I just don't know how it brings together the mortal enemies of Mickey Mouse and Bugs
Bunny . The seemingly...
By Eleonore 2021-10-22 14:32:59
Years of isolation and integration
Watching a 1988 animated film at the beginning of 2020 is really a magical experience.
In the first few minutes, my mother looked at the screen and was stunned: "Are you still watching cartoons when you were a kid?!" Then the detective came on stage, and I realized that this movie is a world where cartoons and real characters coexist.
In Los Angeles, there is a "Thun City" exclusively for cartoon characters. The cartoon star Roger Rabbit suspected that his wife...
By Stevie 2021-10-22 14:32:59
This world is completely my dream, okay!
Cartoon characters and real people are great too
Okay, let’s go back to the topic and talk about some movies.
Is this a movie about fairy tales? No, is this a real-life movie? Nor is it. In my opinion, this is a movie in the so-called "cartoon" shell. Tell me a few details.
1. Whiskey
I think the setting for whiskey is great. It makes a clear distinction between cartoons and real people at once, which I like very...
User comments
( 94 )
Add comments
By Miles 2022-04-24 07:01:03
bookekeeper accountant shut the yap=whinning pencil pusher innocent victim of circumstance emergency=crunch...
By Friedrich 2022-04-24 07:01:03
2014077 A tribute to the cartoons that made people laugh, this film may be more historically significant. There is nothing surprising about the story itself, but the large collection of animated characters at the end is somewhat of a memory of childhood.
By Nico 2022-04-24 07:01:03
Very deliberately lively, and spoofs. Not suitable for small...
By Melissa 2022-04-24 07:01:03
There's Bugs Bunny in...
By Clemmie 2022-04-24 07:01:03
Warner's Movie...
Betty Boop: Work's been kinda slow since cartoons went to color. But I've still got it. Boo boo be do, boo.
Betty Boop: Cigars? Cigarettes?... Eddie Valiant!
Eddie Valiant: [turns around] Betty!
Betty Boop: Long time, no see!
Eddie Valiant: What are you doing here?
Betty Boop: Work's been kinda slow since cartoons went to color. But I still got it, Eddie! "Boop-boop-be-doop-*boop*!"
Eddie Valiant: [grins] Yeah. You still got it.
[Eddie is hiding Roger and the handcuffs in his sink, to hide him from the Toon Patrol]
Smart Ass: Okay, wise-guy. Where's the rabbit?
Eddie Valiant: Haven't seen 'im.
Smart Ass: [sniffs suspiciously at the sink] What's in there?
Eddie Valiant: [holds up a dirty sock] My lingerie.
Smart Ass: [yelps, winces, and covers his nose] I see, Valiant.