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Who Framed Roger Rabbit director Robert Zemeckis has revealed why he believes the film will never receive a sequel, despite a “good script” being written.
The Forrest Gump filmmaker, 72, has said that the current Disney would never make Roger Rabbit today and suggested the character of Jessica Rabbit is too sexualised for the modern iteration of the studio.
“There’s a good script at Disney, but here’s the thing: The current Disney would never make Roger Rabbit today,” he said. “They can’t make a movie with Jessica in it.”
He added: “I mean, look what they did to Jessica at the theme park. They trussed her up in a trench coat, you know?”
Zemeckis went on to say that the original 1988 movie, which featured a ground-breaking combination of live action and animation, was a product of a period of time when Disney was “ready to rebuild itself.”
“We were there when that new regime came in, and they were full of energy, and they wanted to do it,” said the director.
“I kept saying, and I sincerely say this, I do believe this, ‘I’m making Roger Rabbit the way I believe Walt Disney would have made it.’ The reason I say that is because Walt Disney never made any of his movies for children. He always made them for adults. And that’s what I decided to do with Roger Rabbit.”
When the film marked its 30th anniversary in 2018, The Independent film critic Clarisse Loughrey wrote that Jessica Rabbit has feminist appeal.
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“Jessica Rabbit may not dominate the screen time of Who Framed Roger Rabbit, but her legacy has become as outsized as her bra measurements,” wrote Loughrey. “Thanks to those fantastical proportions, she’s both a legitimate sex symbol and the parody of one; an animated cartoon character who’s been lusted over and fetishised to the maximum.
“She’s the pure product of the male gaze, in many ways, since her creators – animator Richard Williams and director Robert Zemeckis – have openly described her as the ‘ultimate male fantasy.’ A walking, talking punchline, too: the drop-dead gorgeous babe who’s saddled with the meek, dorky type. How did a gal like her ever end up with a rabbit like Roger?
“Yet, the most legendary of sex symbols can rarely be so simplistically interpreted. From Marilyn Monroe to Lara Croft, pop culture pin-ups have often come with their own subversive, feminist appeal: especially within the construct of third wave feminism, which allows space not only to embrace contradiction, but to celebrate it.”