Les Aventures de Frère Lapin
Original title: The Adventures of Brer Rabbit
- Video
- 2006
- Tous publics
- 1h 11m
IMDb RATING
5.2/10
466
YOUR RATING
Get ready for laughs, adventure and hip-hopping good times as Brer Rabbit outwits Brer Fox, Brer Bear and a whole cast of other critters.Get ready for laughs, adventure and hip-hopping good times as Brer Rabbit outwits Brer Fox, Brer Bear and a whole cast of other critters.Get ready for laughs, adventure and hip-hopping good times as Brer Rabbit outwits Brer Fox, Brer Bear and a whole cast of other critters.
- Director
- Writers
- Stars
- Awards
- 1 win & 1 nomination total
Monica Allison
- Julie
- (voice)
Wayne Brady
- Brer Wolf
- (voice)
Rhyon Nicole Brown
- Janey
- (voice)
Nick Cannon
- Brer Rabbit
- (voice)
Michael Ferdie
- Ninja #1
- (voice)
Danny Glover
- Brer Turtle
- (voice)
Dorian Harewood
- Mr. Man
- (voice)
D.L. Hughley
- Brer Fox
- (voice)
Jeff Kushner
- Ninja #2
- (voice)
Phil LaMarr
- Brer Gator
- (voice)
Dawnn Lewis
- Mom
- (voice)
Quinton Madina
- Lester
- (voice)
Deborah Speck
- Momma Mouse
- (voice)
Wanda Sykes
- Sister Moon
- (voice)
Debra Wilson
- Sister Buzzard
- (voice)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
This ripoff of Song of the South is OK. My twin sister (mentioned in the Box Office Bunny review) likes this movie than Song of the South though it does not include "Zip-a-Dee-Doo-Dah" because that song is from Song of the South. The Adventures of Brer Rabbit has the characters look different than their Song of the South appearance. In Song of the South, Br'er Frog only appears in The Tar Baby scene and the famous finale. In this ripoff, he appears In How Br'er Rabbit Breaks Up the Party. How Br'er Rabbit Breaks Up the Party is a theory to De-Wuller-De-Wust and Br'er Rabbit Rides the Fox, 2 deleted scenes from Song of the South.
Cute adaption of the stories I remember my mother reading me. The stories remain true to memory, but the dialect was absent which kind of ruined it a little bit for me. DVD quality was excellent. Both my children ages 4 and 14 both had their attentions held on the screen. The colorful scenes held the young ones and Brer rabbit's tricks kept the older kids watching for whats next. The extra DVD games were a little difficult for the younger children but fun for the older set. A fun story to watch with the kids. I just felt it was missing something I couldn't quite put my finger on. I recommend seeing this just not highly. A good rental!
I found this film at the bottom of the bargain bin at Walmart. The fact there was an adaptation of the Uncle Remus stories starting Wayne Brady and Wanda Sykes meant it had to be interesting at the very least. I was expecting it to be quite terrible in a laughable kind of way.
However, it is a very well animated film with a talented voice cast. The character designs were wonderful and the overall art direction was well developed. The score was excellent but the songs were on the verge of unbearably cheesy, if not unnecessary.
Only complaints were that some of the jokes and gags missed the mark a little in a tired hackneyed way. But those moments were short lived. Also, there wasn't enough Wayne and Wanda!
The Uncle Remus stories are a paradoxical dilemma for American audiences. This adaptation removes the social stigmas of Post-Civil War themes but preserves important folk stories of African-American heritage, exposing these tales to a generation that might have otherwise missed this experience.
However, it is a very well animated film with a talented voice cast. The character designs were wonderful and the overall art direction was well developed. The score was excellent but the songs were on the verge of unbearably cheesy, if not unnecessary.
Only complaints were that some of the jokes and gags missed the mark a little in a tired hackneyed way. But those moments were short lived. Also, there wasn't enough Wayne and Wanda!
The Uncle Remus stories are a paradoxical dilemma for American audiences. This adaptation removes the social stigmas of Post-Civil War themes but preserves important folk stories of African-American heritage, exposing these tales to a generation that might have otherwise missed this experience.
10downsam
The film features many of today's notable Black entertainers. My girls (4 & 7 y.o.) are loving it. It is a great way to keep these traditional stories alive. It is also a good way to teach children about contrasting mediums (film vs. writing). You may be also get them to read the stories in various editions. The songs are great! They too are part of the Black cultural traditions. The film does a good job of presenting both sides of morality, that someone can do good and bad things. I am thoroughly enjoying myself watching the film with my children. It retells the stories I know plus many I don't. Great for the whole family.
10juliabel
Growing up in Atlanta down the street from "The Wrens Nest", the birthplace of Brer Rabbit, and his wonderful friends, as a child I read all of the Uncle Remus stories, and knew them well. The only variance from the original stories, is the substitution of Brer Turtle for Uncle Remus. Otherwise they are great morality tales mixed with a lot of fun, and quite authentic including the tar baby, the laughing place, and the proverbial briar patch. It's thoroughly enjoyable, and I would recommend this to anyone young or old!
Did you know
- TriviaThe last film to be released by Universal under the Universal Cartoon Studios banner.
- ConnectionsReferenced in Le Monde après nous (2023)
- SoundtracksEverybody's Here
Written by Michele Brourman & Monty Seward & Kimaya Seward
Produced by Michele Brourman & Monty Seward
Performed by Tata Vega, Terry Dexter, Kimaya Seward, Monty Seward, Kevin Dorsey,
Ken Stacey, Terron Brooks
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official site
- Language
- Also known as
- The Adventures of Brer Rabbit
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 1h 11m(71 min)
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1
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