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Rabbits

  • 2002
  • 43min
NOTE IMDb
6,9/10
8,9 k
MA NOTE
Rabbits (2002)
Court-métrageDrameFantaisieHorreurMystèreThriller

Dans une ville sans nom, baignée par une pluie incessante, trois lapins vivent avec un terrible mystère.Dans une ville sans nom, baignée par une pluie incessante, trois lapins vivent avec un terrible mystère.Dans une ville sans nom, baignée par une pluie incessante, trois lapins vivent avec un terrible mystère.

  • Réalisation
    • David Lynch
  • Scénario
    • David Lynch
  • Casting principal
    • Scott Coffey
    • Rebekah Del Rio
    • Laura Harring
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • NOTE IMDb
    6,9/10
    8,9 k
    MA NOTE
    • Réalisation
      • David Lynch
    • Scénario
      • David Lynch
    • Casting principal
      • Scott Coffey
      • Rebekah Del Rio
      • Laura Harring
    • 49avis d'utilisateurs
    • 14avis des critiques
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Voir les informations de production sur IMDbPro
  • Photos78

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    Rôles principaux4

    Modifier
    Scott Coffey
    Scott Coffey
    • Jack
    Rebekah Del Rio
    Rebekah Del Rio
    • Jane
    Laura Harring
    Laura Harring
    • Jane
    • (as Laura Elena Harring)
    Naomi Watts
    Naomi Watts
    • Suzie
    • Réalisation
      • David Lynch
    • Scénario
      • David Lynch
    • Toute la distribution et toute l’équipe technique
    • Production, box office et plus encore chez IMDbPro

    Avis des utilisateurs49

    6,98.8K
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    Avis à la une

    tedg

    Alice Inverted

    Lynch really elevated my opinion of him here. This is very, very well constructed. It is the highest art.

    That means that any "explanation" will be worthless. You can read some other material to discover something of what you will see.

    Its unsettling and strange, hypnotic and lyrical. That it is in several "episodes" is all a part of how certain familiar forms are subverted to give us something that has identity and also has a sort of meta-identity defined by deviance from the expected.

    My observation will be highly personal. I see this as a sort of "Rosencrantz and Guildenstern" but instead of referencing "Hamlet" engages "Alice in Wonderland." It fits, especially if you are inclined — as I am — to blow Alice into something as world-swallowing as Hamlet. Where Hamlet is all about what it means to sit in the world, Alice works at more refined level, being all about what it means to carry a name in the world.

    One is about being and the other about what we see and acknowledge about being. Its this second conceptual space that Lynch inhabits, always has. His "firewalking" TeeVee stuff bends notions of representation and discovery, the amusement being not in what we see, but in the difference between what we expect to see.

    Let's look at the entire vocabulary he has toyed with. First, he acknowledges the audience (laugh track), camera (static but in and out of focus), narrative (drawn more overtly by its fragmentation), framing (with very formal, abstract composition) and "acting," which here consists more of pauses and empty spaces than anything we normally associate with acting.

    And then there's the bending of the form. We have a demon that appears twice. Its noir drawn tightly, especially since there is a hint that the demon or his avatar as perhaps a "lost dog" is driving the entire situation.

    And then we have three "performances," one each by the three characters. These are accompanied by an ignited set, literally ignited. The performances, which each occupy an episode, are pretty transcendent in terms of what we would see in an ordinary drama. In such a case, each would "solo" in such a way that their soul was revealed. Its the challenge of the writer to weave this into events in such a way that we don't see the performer revealing his character overtly. This is different; all pretense is removed. The character enters and opens its heart with no narrative baggage. What the character tells us actually has more information about context than the surrounding context provides.

    Ted's Evaluation -- 3 of 3: Worth watching.
    7SplendicaIndica

    Definitely, Something is Wrong

    The rabbits are us in the way we live our entire lives separated from death only by our domestic routines of normalcy and our denial. Rabbits are bred for the slaughter; they live their entire lives in their little cage, surrounded by, and fed by, the very same people who will someday unthinkingly break their necks.

    They're traumatized by the collective memory of past relatives being snatched from their cages while the characters themselves were still too young to fully comprehend the severity and reality of what was happening. The horrors they witnessed so long ago are now just an underlying feeling that something is wrong. They, and we, live their entire lives among death, ignorantly and purposely oblivious of it, until the one day when they are able to ignore it no more, until the day it is their turn.

    That's what sense I made out of it anyway.
    7nikhil7179

    Freakier than Teletubbies!!

    This is one of the more bizarre films featuring humans in fluffy bunny suits.

    David Lynch juxtaposes Sartrean existentialism and American sitcom with an eerie, industrial-noir soundtrack to create a compelling, hellish universe like only he can.

    Also, this is maybe one of the greatest uses of bunnies in storytelling, since Lewis Carroll (with the exception of Hugh Hefner).

    With the recent influx of rabbit suits in other indie films, like Gummo and Donnie Darko, one can only expect this trend to grow and explode on the catwalks of Milan and Paris.
    bob the moo

    Perfect Lynch stuff in small bursts but stretched beyond its capacity with the 45 minute running time

    Everyone who has seen David Lynch's Inland Empire will be familiar with the rabbits of this short film (screened in some places broken down into episodes). Personally I struggled to work out if Inland Empire was brilliant or rubbish and ultimately I concluded that it was both but that it was worth seeing because of what an unnerving and unusual experience it was. The rabbit snippets are all part of it as they meant very little to be but yet managed to actually make me feel uncomfortable and uneasy while watching them. As a result I decided to check out the full Rabbits film.

    In an interviewer about Lynch's website project, someone did describe Rabbits as one for the hard-core Lynch fans and this description is bang on the money because it does deliver everything that he does well while also failing (or rather, not trying) to deliver in other, usual areas. Where the snippets hit home for me is in their sheer menacing stiffness. "Normal" things such as the apartment and the idea of a sitcom are all presented in a twisted and perverted way that Lynch viewers will be used to. Just like in Twin Peaks (where backwards characters talk in a red velvet room) the movement is strange, the lighting is eerie, the dialogue is confusing and the whole thing is delivered under a brooding score that suggests an impending destruction or evil.

    In this regard the film is quite brilliant and it is very disturbing to watch it in a dark room n a quiet night. But this is also the problem with the film because there is nothing more to it and ultimately the novelty value of it wears off long before the 45 minute mark. After a while I did want more but the film just continued to deliver what it had done at the very start. Die-hard fans of Lynch will love it and take pleasure in trying to pick the meaning out of it but for me it was more a matter of hanging on until the conclusion. It is a shame because in small sections Rabbits is really well done and fascinating. Lynch's creativity is powerful and works across the board – many have neglected to mention the physical actors in the film (not the famous voices) but their work is important, with a stillness and deliberate movements being key in the delivery.

    Overall then a very strong film for those that love Lynch's creepy work but it is hard to ignore the fact that the running time is too long to sustain the long pauses and very slow pace. As a result it never works as well as it does in its limited use within Inland Empire. Fans should still watch it for what it does well but for the majority of viewers the running time will be far too long and boredom may take away from the uneasy and creepy delivery.
    RJC-99

    "Pets or Food"

    The single camera is fixed on a wide shot of a sparsely-furnished, eerily-lit apartment, a subdued den of deco and menace. Yes, a glance confirms, Mr. Lynch is caretaker here.

    For five minutes, as Badalamenti's synths sigh over distant fog horns and muted thunder, we watch the rabbit people--actors in cheap rabbit suits worn under drab human clothing. Their day is winding down. They work at an ironing board, sit on the art deco sofa, rise, sit down again, exit, return, sing some verses about "dark, smiling teeth," and trade dark, smiling dialogue. The rabbit people play to an unseen studio audience, which greets their entrances with on-cue applause and their oblique lines with canned laughter. Minutes pass. . . Then: a superimposed mouth begins a demonic incantation. A huge match burns. The camera blurs out of focus, and then--you'd better believe it!--refocuses.

    That's it. The result is weird, beautiful, unnerving, and, frankly, never far from being boring.

    Histoire

    Modifier

    Le saviez-vous

    Modifier
    • Anecdotes
      Described by Lynch as a 9 episode sitcom.
    • Citations

      Jack: I hear someone.

      Suzie: I heard it too.

      Jane: I could hear it also.

      Suzie: It must be the rain.

      Jack: It is the rain.

      Jane: I do not think it is the rain.

      Jack: Quiet!

      Suzie: It was the voice of a man.

      Jack: It was a man in a green suit.

    • Connexions
      Featured in Inland Empire (2006)

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    FAQ1

    • Was this a TV series?

    Détails

    Modifier
    • Date de sortie
      • 9 juin 2002 (États-Unis)
    • Pays d’origine
      • États-Unis
    • Langue
      • Anglais
    • Aussi connu sous le nom de
      • Conejos
    • Société de production
      • Asymmetrical Productions
    • Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro

    Spécifications techniques

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    • Durée
      • 43min
    • Couleur
      • Color
    • Rapport de forme
      • 1.78 : 1

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