Thursday, July 28, 2016

Tower Heist Review












Tower Heist


Release Date: 26th December 2011 - Australia


Production Companies
Universal Pictures
Imagine Entertainment
Relativity Media (in association with)
Rat Entertainment
Dentsu (in association with)

Distribution
Universal Pictures Australia


Genre: Comedy

Rating: M

Runtime: 100 minutes


Budget: $85,000,000

Box Office Gross: $152,930,623
(Worldwide)


Plot Summary
Ben Stiller and Eddie
Murphy lead an all-star
cast in this hilarious
comedy caper about a
luxury condo manager
who leads a staff of
workers to seek pay-
back on the Wall Street
swindler who defrauded
them. With only days
until the billionaire gets
away with the perfect
crime, the unlikely
crew of amateur thieves
enlists the help of petty
crook Slide to steal the
$20 million they're sure
is hidden in the penthouse.


Cast
Ben Stiller - Josh Kovaks
Eddie Murphy - Slide
Casey Affleck - Charlie
Alan Alda - Arthur Shaw
Matthew Broderick - Mr. Fitzhugh
Stephen Henderson - Lester
Judd Hirsch - Mr. Simon
Tea Leoni - Special Agent Claire Denham
Michael Pena - Enrique Dev'Reaux
Gabourey Sidibe - Odessa
Nina Arianda - Miss Iovenko
Marcia Jean Kurtz - Rose
Juan Carlos Hernandez - Manuel
Harry O'Reilly - Special Agent Dansk
Peter Van Wagner - Marty Klein Esq.
Zeljko Ivanek - Director Mazin
Jessica Szohr - Sasha
Robert Downey Sr. - Judge Ramos

Crew
Director - Brett Ratner
Based on Concept - Eric Ehrenhaus
Story - Adam Cooper and Bill Collage
Story/Screenplay - Ted Griffin
Screenplay - Jeff Nathanson
Unit Production Manager/
Executive Producer - Bill Carraro
Executive Producer - Karen Kehela Sherwood
Producers - Eddie Murphy,
Brian Grazer and Kim Roth
Production Designer - Kristi Zea
Costume Designer - Sarah Edwards
Director of Photography - Dante Spinotti
Second Unit Director/Stunt Player - G.A. Aguilar
Stunt Coordinator - Jery Hewitt
Special Effects Coordinator - Steven Kirshoff
Visual Effects Supervisors - Mark Russell and
Mohummed Yusef
Visual Effects Producer - Ginger Theisen
Visual Effects Consultant - Adam Howard
Film Editor - Mark Helfrich
Music - Christophe Beck


Review
The year of 2011 ended the holiday season with the fun-filled and ordinary caper comedy of 'TOWER HEIST'. I have finally set some time aside to indulge in this comedy which I'm not gonna lie, I did my hopes up for. It certainly wasn't as clever and elaborate as other classic heist movies that have been done, such as the original, remake and its sequels of 'Ocean's Eleven', 'Inception' and later ones like 'Now You See Me'. The storyline is tried, exhausted and has been done too many times before to be of any real interest. Probably because the writers are running out of ideas mostly. Some aspects of this movie are appealing, particularly certain scenes of comedy for example, a funny scene where a hotel maid rams a trolley into a security agent and knocks him out clean. Unfortunately, the amusing scenes in this movie are just too few and scarce. The other flaw with this film is the bad pacing where it moves along too slowly and this causes you to lose interest.

'TOWER HEIST' does bring a stellar star cast of leading ensembles, comedy film buffs will be happy to see some of their favourite comedic actors all together in this film. The actors all deliver performances which are commendable especially Eddie Murphy is quite simply in one word "hilarious" in anything that he ever does. The director Brett Ratner is well known for doing action/comedy and usually he does it very well, but maybe he's losing his touch.

The problem with this movie is it is just not very memorable, if I reflect back on the movie I can't really remember any standout scenes with exception of just a few. This is a movie that I would not be motivated watch again. If you like heist movies, 'OCEAN'S ELEVEN' is the mother of all features of this sub-genre.

Star rating: (6/10) Fair Movie


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Monday, July 25, 2016

Finding Dory Review












Finding Dory


Release Date: 16th June 2016 - Australia


Production Companies
Walt Disney Pictures
Pixar Animation Studios

Distribution
Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures Australia


Genre: Animation/Family/
Comedy/Adventure

Rating: G

Runtime: 103 minutes


Budget: $200,000,000

Box Office Gross: $1,028,570,942 (Worldwide)


Plot Summary
After Nemo is found and safely returned home, a year passes, and the forgetful but friendly blue tang fish Dory begins to have a flashback of her past. She sets off on an adventure with her friends to look for her long-lost family. Her quest continues when she is brought to the Marine Life Institute and meets some new friends.


Voice Cast
Albert Brooks - Marlin
Ellen DeGeneres - Dory
Sloane Murray - Baby Dory
Hayden Rolence - Nemo
Ed O'Neill - Hank
Diane Keaton - Jenny
Eugene Levy - Charlie
Kaitlin Olson - Destiny
Ty Burrell - Bailey
Idris Elba - Fluke
Dominic West - Rudder
Bob Peterson - Mr. Ray/
Additional Voices
Andrew Stanton - Crush/
Additional Voices
Bennett Dammann - Squirt
Bill Hader - Fish Husband
Kate McKinnon - Fish Wife
Angus MacLane - Sunfish
'Charlie Back-and-Forth'/
Additional Voices
Sigourney Weaver - Herself
Alexander Gould - Passenger Carl (Cameo)/Additional Voices
John Ratzenberger - Bill
Torbin Xan Bullock - Gerald/
Additional Voices
Willem Dafoe - Gil (Cameo)
Brad Garrett - Bloat (Cameo)
Allison Janney - Peach (Cameo)
Austin Pendleton - Gurgle (Cameo)
Stephen Root - Bubbles (Cameo)
Vicki Lewis - Deb (Cameo)
Jerome Ranft - Jacques (Cameo)
Lucia Geddes - Tween Dory

Crew
Original Story/Screenplay/
Director - Andrew Stanton
Co-Director/Additional Story Material -
Angus MacLane
Screenplay - Victoria Strouse
Additional Screenplay Material - Bob Peterson
Executive Producer - John Lasseter
Producer - Lindsey Collins
Production Designer - Steve Pilcher
Character Art Director - Jason Deamer
Sets Art Director - Don Shank
Additional Shading Art Director - Bert Berry
Story Supervisor - Maxwell Bruce IV
Character Supervisor - Jeremie Talbot
Character Modelling & Articulation Lead -
Mark Piretti
Supervising Animators - David DeDan and
Michael Stocker
Directing Animators - Robb Denovan
and Michal Makarewicz
Director of Photography: Camera -
Jeremy Lasky
Director of Photography: Lighting -
Ian Megibben
Visual Consultant - Sharon Calahan
Stereoscopic Supervisor - Bob Whitehill
Film Editor - Axel Geddes
Second Film Editors - Torbin Xan Bullock,
Robert Grahamjones and Sarah K. Reimers
Additional Editors - Nicholas C. Smith,
Serena Warner, Steve Bloom and
John Bryant (Uncredited)
Sound Designer - Tim Nielsen
Supervising Sound Editor - Steve Slanec
Sound Effects Editors - Jack Whittaker,
Jon Borland and Ken Fischer
Re-Recording Mixers - Nathan Nance
and Michael Semanick
Foley Artists - John Roesch and
Shelley Roden
Music - Thomas Newman
Executive Music Producer - Chris Montan
Music Supervisor - Tom MacDougall


Review
In 2015, Inside Out proved that the fledging company Pixar is back on track to produce high-quality animated features with meaningful plots and colourful characters. However, after the less-than-successful The Good Dinosaur, it wasn't over in 2016, a sequel released by Pixar that isn't part of the Toy Story series as FINDING DORY. The new sequel revolves around the iconic but goofy and forgetful fish character from the original Finding Nemo, who embarks on a discovery to reunite with her long-lost family. It may seem like an attempt to shoehorn a breakout character to be the main protagonist, as it has happened before with that hick tow-truck Mater in Cars 2. I'm just glad these animators have learned their lesson. Though, the story is much less meaningful compared to the first instalment. It still manages to create an emotional journey about reuniting with family.

I remember Ellen DeGeneres' voice of Dory as highly energetic in Finding Nemo. She continues to be that same character while portraying softer tones for dramatic scenes. Actor/comedic veteran Ed O'Neill plays an unfriendly octopus, Hank, with a big chip on his tentacle.

This picture may not win over a few bitterly disappointed fans who have grown up with the title character and its predecessor. I look forward to rewatching it on Blu-ray as it is one to add to the collection. I'm still not a big fan of FINDING DORY and Nemo, but it's a must-see film. It has been an intriguing review from RadDingo, over and out.

Star rating: (8/10) Very Good Movie

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Monday, July 18, 2016

Independence Day: Resurgence Review












Independence Day: Resurgence


Release Date: 23rd June 2016 - Australia


Production Companies
Centropolis Entertainment
TSG Entertainment
20th Century Fox Film Corporation

Distribution
20th Century Fox Australia


Genre: Sci-Fi

Rating: M

Runtime: 129 minutes


Budget: $165,000,000

Box Office Gross: $389,681,935 (Worldwide)


Plot Summary
Twenty years after the alien invasion of Earth had almost destroyed its beings, the world has used the recovered alien technology to fuse with the technology of humanity. And its nations have collaborated on an immense space defence program to defend the planet from another alien attack. But nothing could prepare
them for the new threat
of extraterrestrial invaders,
as their mothership was
twice the size of the last
one they'd destroyed. This
time, a few brave men and
women must band together
to save the world, but
will they have enough
firepower to take down
the invaders, or will this
battle change, and will
the aliens take over and wipe out humanity before all hope is lost?


Cast
Liam Hemsworth - Jake Morrison
Jeff Goldblum - David Levinson
Jessie T. Usher - Dylan Hiller
Bill Pullman - Thomas J. Whitmore
Maika Monroe - Patricia Whitmore
Sela Ward - President Lamford
William Fichtner - General Adams
Judd Hirsch - Julius Levinson
Patrick St. Esprit - Secretary of Defense Tanner
Brent Spiner - Dr. Brackish Okun
Vivica A. Fox - Jasmine Hiller
Angelababy - Rain Lao
Charlotte Gainsbourg - Catherine Marceaux
Deobia Oparei - Dikembe Umbutu
Nicolas Wright - Floyd Rosenberg
Travis Tope - Charlie Miller
Chin Han - Commander Jiang
Gbenga Akinnagbe - Agent Travis
Robert Loggia - General Grey
John Storey - Dr. Isaacs
Joey King - Sam
Jenna Purdy - Sphere (Voice)
Garrett Wareing - Bobby
Hays Wellford - Felix
Mckenna Grace - Daisy
James A. Woods - Lt. Ritter
Robert Neary - Captain McQuaide
Joshua Mikel - Armand
Joel Virgel - Jaques
Arturo del Puerto - Bordeaux
Travis Hammer - Jeffrey Fineman
Lance Lim - Camper Kevin
Zeb Sanders - Camper Henry
Donovan Tyee Smith - Camper Marcus

Crew
Based on Characters/
Story/Writer/Producer/
Director - Roland Emmerich
Based on Characters/Story/
Writer/Producer - Dean Devlin
Story/Screenplay - Nicolas Wright and James A. Woods
Screenplay - James Vanderbilt and Carter Blanchard (Uncredited)
Executive Producer - Ute Emmerich
Executive Producers/Unit
Production Managers - Larry
J. Franco and Carsten H.W. Lorenz
Producer/Music - Harald Kloser
Co-Producer/Visual Effects
Supervisor - Volker Engel
Co-Producer/First Assistant Director - K.C. Hodenfield
Co-Producer - Marco Shepherd
Casting - John Papsidera
Production Designer - Barry Chusid
Conceptual Artwork/Concept Illustrator -
Johannes Mücke
Concept Illustrators - Daren Dochterman,
Mark Yang, Fausto DeMartini, Steve Burg,
Jim Carson and Christian Scheurer
Concept Illustrator/Visual Effects
Art Director - Michael Maher
Production Illustrator - Sean Hargreaves
Vehicle Art Director - Ron Mendell
Supervising Art Director - Patrick M. Sullivan Jr.
Art Directors - Caty Maxey, Christa Munro,
Eric Sundahl and Clint Wallace
Creature Designer - Patrick Tatopoulos
Set Decorator - Jay Hart
Assistant Set Decorator - Kevin Krupp
Property Master - Brad Einhorn
Costume Designer - Lisy Christl
Director of Photography - Markus Forderer
Additional Photography - Robby Baumgartner
Stunt Coordinator - John Stoneham Jr.
Special Effects Coordinator - David Greene
Senior Visual Effects Supervisor: Weta Digital -
Joe Letteri
Senior Visual Effects Supervisor: Cinesite -
Holger Voss
Visual Effects Supervisor: Weta Digital - Matt Aitken
Visual Effects Supervisor: MPC - Sue Rowe
Visual Effects Supervisors: Scanline VFX -
Bryan Grill and Mohsen Mousavi
Additional Visual Effects Supervisor - Douglas Smith
Additional Visual Effects Supervisors: Cinesite -
Christian Nickel, Eamonn Butler,
Etienne Daigle and Stephanie Paris
Visual Effects Producers - Marc Weigert,
Terry Cloutiax and Katharina Salinger
Visual Effects Producer: Scanline VFX - Robert E. Evans
Visual Effects Producer: Digital Domain - Steve Won
Global Head of VFX: MPC - Greg Butler
Digital Effects Supervisor: Cinesite - Aymeric Perceval
Animation Supervisor - Conrad Murrey
Animation Supervisor: Weta Digital - David Clayton
Animation Supervisor: MPC - Matt Kowaliszyn
Animation Supervisor: Image Engine -
Jason Snyman
Supervisors: Digital Domain - Dean Broadland,
Jan Philip Cramer, Michael Melchorre
and Hanzhi Tang
Film Editor - Adam Wolfe
Additional Editors - David Brenner,
Joe Hutshing and Mitchell J. Glaser
Re-Recording Mixer/Sound Designer/
Supervising Sound Editor - Paul N.J. Ottosson
Re-Recording Mixer - Michael Minkler
Foley Artists - Gary A. Hecker and
Michael Broomberg
Music - Thomas Wanker


Review
1996, the first Independence Day movie made a massive impact on audiences. It had the money shot of the alien spaceship destroying the landmark of the White House. History is about to repeat itself with the latest sequel produced as a visual extravaganza but is dumber and huger than the original blockbuster. I wasn't sure INDEPENDENCE DAY: RESURGENCE would succeed without Will Smith returning as one of the main leads from the original. This new movie would have been heavier on nostalgia if Smith had reprised his role, but unfortunately, he was too expensive for the sequel. With the absence of Smith, his character is no longer essential to the storyline in the director's favour. RESURGENCE is still colourful and fully action-driven, but more is needed to compensate for the unwarranted aspects like uninteresting new characters and awkward pacing.

Fans will miss the presence of Will Smith but are thankful for the returns of Jeff Goldblum and Bill Pullman, whose roles stayed the same for twenty years. Even Brent Spiner had a blast returning as the eccentric and mad scientist Dr. Okun and has more screen time than the first. The new actor Liam Hemsworth has tried to be better than Will Smith but is a cliche and carbon copy of that character.

The 90s are still over, but RESURGENCE isn't only trying to relive its past. It is trying to evolve into the modern era from which the technology of VFX has changed a lot. Unfortunately, the film's scriptwriting hasn't improved. That's why I thought RESURGENCE was an average sequel.

Star rating: (5/10) Average

Tuesday, July 12, 2016

Trivia Questions

Hi, this is Rad Dingo here! I've just posted two film trivia questionnaire polls on the sidebar. It is supposed to challenge your knowledge about different films. I'll welcome everyone to give it a go.

It will only take five to ten minutes of your time. The questions start out being easy and get more advanced towards the end. The questions are all multiple-choice. I challenge you to try to answer all these questions without cheating. Prove to yourself that you are a true movie fanatic.

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Monday, July 11, 2016

WarGames: The Dead Code Review











WarGames: The Dead Code


Release Date: 17th December 2008 - 
Australia (Direct to Video)


Production Companies
Metro Goldwyn-Mayer


Genre: Thriller

Rating: M

Runtime: 96 minutes


Plot Summary
When Will Farmer hacks 
into a restricted network 
of online gaming known 
only as R.I.P.L.E.Y. (Ripley), 
he stumbles onto a national 
defense system designed 
to ferret out fledging 
terrorist cells...and becomes 
Ripley's next target! His 
identity compromised, 
his family and friends 
jeopardised and his 
hometown in the crosshairs 
of an automated military 
response, Will's only hope 
to clear his name lies in 
beating Ripley at her own 
game. But when the game 
escalates to the next level, 
it becomes a race against 
time to stop Ripley from 
unleashing Armageddon!


Cast
Matt Lanter - Will Farmer
Amanda Walsh - Annie D'Mateo
Colm Feore - T. Kenneth Hassert/
Joshua (Voice)
Chuck Shamata - Bill Carter
Maxim Roy - Tina Rashie
Nicolas Wright - Dennis Nichols
Gary Reineke - Stephen Falken
Susan Glover - Gail Farmer
Trevor Hayes - Agent Aaron Scott
Vlasta Vrana - Ivan Prokosh
Ricky Mabe - Newman (DNI Tech)
Claudio Black - R.I.P.L.E.Y. (Voice)

Crew
Director - Stuart Gillard
Based on Characters - Lawrence Lasker and Walter F. Parkes
Story - Rob Kerchner
Story/Screenplay - Randall Badat
Executive Producers - Hudson Hickman and Sara Berrisford
Producer - Irene Litinsky
Production Designe - Guy Lalande
Director of Photography - Bruce Chun
Editor - Robin Russell
Music - John Van Tongeren


Review
I've always hated the idea that most classic movies like 'WarGames' have horrendous sequels that were lower-budgeted and released straight to DVD. 'THE DEAD CODE' was produced twenty-five years after the original movie but none of the actors want to return in this atrociously bad instalment. Neither Matthew Broderick nor Ally Sheedy will be making their cameo appearances in this unneeded cash-grab. It was a huge attempt into turning  'WarGames' into a continuing series with each movie being more thrilling and more complex to the classic original. The storyline was a perfect retread to the original 'WarGames', but would have had a spot of redemption if the sequel was nonexistent and had been used in the future remake.

Matt Lanter and Amanda Walsh are the main actors of the redundant sequel and neither of them showed any good acting skill and the mundane, second-rate direction could not save the film. Their two performances weren't exactly the best and more likely to come out as the worst in history.

'THE DEAD CODE' is best referred as a sequel that nobody wants to see and has to be booted out of the franchise completely. None of you cinema-goers will ever want to watch this one as 'THE DEAD CODE' is enough to drop your IQ points by thirty. So stay tuned for the next review, folks!

Star rating: (3/10) Disappointing

Wednesday, July 6, 2016

Freddie as F.R.O.7 Review











Freddie as F.R.O.7 


Release Date: 28th August 1992 - USA


Production Companies
Hollywood Road Films
J&M Entertainment
Motion Picture Investments
Shapiro-Glickenhaus Entertainment


Genre: Animation/Family

Rating: PG

Runtime: 93 minutes


Box Office Gross: $1,119,368 (USA)


Plot Summary
The story about a man-
sized frog named Prince
Frederic who is turned
into a frog by his wicked
aunt Messina and hired
by British Intelligence
to solve the mysterious
disappearances of some
of Britian's greatest
monuments. Several
hundred years later,
Freddie is now living in
modern-day Paris -- a
six-foot-tall amphibian
with moniker Secret
Agent F.R.O.7. Messina,
too, is still around
causing mischief, joining
forces with an arch-villain
named El Supremo in a
scheme to shrink Big
Ben. Freddie, alerted to
Messina's nefarious plans,
gathers his fellow agents
Daffers and Scottie
together, planning to
hide out in Big Ben and
surprise the evil doers
when they are set to
strike at the much-loved
British landmark. (Source - IMDb)


Voice Cast
Adrian Della Touche - Narrator
Ben Kingsley - Freddie
Edmund Kingsley - Young Freddie
Jenny Agutter - Daffers
John Sessions - Scotty/
Additional Voices
Brian Blessed - El Supremo
Nigel Hawthorne - Brigadier G
Billie Whitelaw - Messina
Phyllis Logan - Nessie
Sir Michael Hordern - King
Jonathan Pryce - Trilby
Prunella Scales - Queen/Additional Voices
Victor Maddern - Old Gentleman Raven

Crew
Script/Lyrics: Evil Mainya and Shy Girl/
Producer/Director - Jon Acevski 
Script - David Ashton
Producer - Norman Priggen
Art Director - Paul Shardlow
Cinematography - Rex Neville
Storyboard Director - Denis Rich
Animation Director - Tony Guy
Character Designer/Sequence Director -
Richard Fawdry
Sequence Directors - Roberto Casale,
Bill Hajee and Alain Maindron
Head of Paint and Trace - Lucy Ash
Film Editors - Mick Manning and 
Alex Rayment
Music/Songs - David Dunda and 
Rick Wentworth


Review
It is a fact that the director of this film created a British animated film which is actually inspired by stories that he used to tell his son about a young prince who gets turned into a frog and becomes a spy. This turns into a very strange movie for those who haven't seen it. I sought to critique 'FREDDIE AS F.R.O.7' years ago when I wanted to watch it again on YouTube after having read its history. The movie earned a dismal profit at the box office and became the third lowest grossing animation of all time. This film failed to achieve the director's vision of creating an animated musical fairy tale and instead was let down with characters that just didn't belong there like the Loch Ness monster. 'FREDDIE AS F.R.O.7' came across as a Disney knock-off to try and take away Disney's spotlight during the Katzenberg era of 1989 to 1994.

The film's narrative is incomprehensible and the songs that include the famed musical talents of Grace Jones, Boy George, ASIA and others confuses people of which kind of film this really is. Where some parts of the film has its roots in musical where characters are signing. Other parts contradict this and instead have background music. This just seems very disorganised and misleading. I've paid my attention to the animation which is sometimes inconsistent but rather pleasant and the wonderful voice work of Ben Kingsley and Brian Blessed who are brilliant and over-the-top in their main characters.

I will not punish myself to sit through this movie again despite regretfully watching it a few times on YouTube. Indeed, even the edited version in America with James Earl Jones' narration does nothing to redeem this movie of its flaws. If I were you, I would give this one a miss.

Star rating: (4/10) Below Average

Monday, July 4, 2016

Who Framed Roger Rabbit Review












Who Framed Roger Rabbit


Release Date: 24th November 1988 - Australia


Production Companies
Touchstone Pictures (presents)
Amblin Entertainment
Silver Screen Partners III (in association with)
Walt Disney Feature Animation (Uncredited)

Distribution
Walt Disney Studios Motion Pictures Australia


Genre: Comedy/Mystery

Rating: PG

Runtime: 104 minutes


Budget: $58,000,000

Box Office Gross: $351,500,000 (Worldwide)


Plot Summary
In 1947, Eddie Valiant, a Toon-hating detective, must solve the murder of Acme Corporation and Toontown owner Marvin Acme and prove the innocence of cartoon star Roger Rabbit, who was the prime suspect in this heinous crime. They must learn to watch out for the sinister Judge Doom, who will stop at nothing but bring Roger to justice.


Cast
Bob Hoskins - Eddie Valiant
Christopher Lloyd - Judge Doom
Joanna Cassidy - Dolores
Stubby Kaye - Marvin Acme
Alan Tilvern - R. K. Maroon
Richard LeParmentier - Lt. Santino
Betsy Brantley - Jessica's Performance Model
Joel Silver - Raoul (Director)
Paul Springer - Augie
Richard Ridings - Angelo
Mike Edmonds - Stretch
Morgan Deare - Editor

Voice Cast
Charles Fleischer - Roger Rabbit/Benny the Cab/
Greasy/Psycho
Kathleen Turner - Jessica Rabbit (Uncredited)
David L. Lander - Smart Ass
Fred Newman - Stupid
Lou Hirsch - Baby Herman
Mae Questel - Betty Boop
Mel Blanc - Bugs Bunny/Daffy
Duck/Tweety Bird/Sylvester/
Porky Pig
Joe Alaskey - Yosemite Sam/Foghorn Leghorn
Wayne Allwine - Mickey Mouse
Tony Anselmo - Donald Duck
Russi Taylor - Birds/Minnie Mouse
Bill Farmer - Goofy (Uncredited)
Tony Pope - Goofy/Wolf
April Winchell - Mrs. Herman
Frank Sinatra - The Singing Sword (archive sound)
Frank Welker - Dumbo
June Foray - Wheezy/Lena Hyena
Richard Williams - Droopy
Pat Buttram - Bullet #1
Jim Cummings - Bullet #2
Jim Galland - Bullet #3
Less Perkins - Mr. Toad
Peter Westy - Pinocchio
Cherry Davis - Woody Woodpecker
Mary T. Radford - Hippo
Morgan Deare - Gorilla

Crew
Director - Robert Zemeckis
Based on the Novel "Who Censored Roger
Rabbit?" - Gary K. Wolf
Screenplay - Jeffrey Price and Peter S. Seaman
Associate Producers - Don Hahn and
Steve Starkey
Executive Producers - Steven Spielberg
and Kathleen Kennedy
Producer/Second Unit Director: UK -
Frank Marshall
Producer - Robert Watts
Casting Director: UK - Priscilla John
Production Designers - Elliot Scott
and Roger Cain
Production Illustrators: USA - Martin A. Kline
and David Russell
Concept Designer - Michael Peraza Jr.
Art Director: UK - Stephen Scott
Location Art Director: UK - Keith Pain
Draughtsmen: UK - Richard Holland
and Peter Russell
Storyboard Artists: UK - Michael White and
Syd Cain
Storysketch: Animation - Joe Ranft,
Mark Kausler, Hans Bacher and
Harald Siepermann
Layout - Roy Naisbitt
Layout: Additional Animation -
William H. Frake III and Dave Dunnet
Set Decorator: UK - Peter Howitt
Set Decorator: USA - Robert R. Benton
Property Master: UK - Barry Wilkinson
Costume Designer - Joanna Johnston
Assistant Costume Designer - Graham Churchyard
Makeup Artist: UK - Peter Robb-King
Chief Makeup Artist: Second Unit, UK -
Lois Burwell
Hair Stylist: UK - Colin Jamison
Director of Photography - Dean Cundey
Additional Photography: Second Unit, UK -
Paul Beeson
Director of Photography: Second Unit, USA -
Gregg Heschong
Camera Operators: UK - Raymond Stella
and David Worley
Camera Operator: Second Unit, USA -
James L. Bryan
First Assistant Camera: USA - Clyde E. Bryan
and Stephen Tate
Production Manager: UK - Patricia Carr
Unit Production Manager: USA - Jack Frost Sanders
First Assistant Director: UK - Michael Murray
First Assistant Director: USA - David McGiffert
First Assistant Director: Second Unit, USA -
Marty P. Ewing
Second Assistant Director: UK - Chris Brock
Third Assistant Director: UK - Peter Heslop
Location Manager: UK - Philip Kohler
Second Unit Director: UK - Ian Sharp
Second Unit Director: USA - Max Kleven
Stunt Arranger - Peter Diamond
Chief Puppeteer: UK - David Alan Barclay
Director of Animation - Richard Williams
Supervising Animator: "Roger Rabbit" -
Andreas Deja
Supervising Animators - Russell Hall,
Phil Nibbelink and Simon Wells
Chief Executive and Supervising Animator:
Additional Animation - Dale Baer
Animation Consultants - Stan Green,
Chuck Jones and Walt Stanchfield
Animation Effects Supervisor - Chris Knott
Animated Effects Supervisor: Additional
Animation - Don Paul
Animation Camera Supervisor -
John Leatherbarrow
Mechanical Effects Supervisor - George Gibbs
Special Effects Supervisor: USA -
Michael Lantieri
Visual Effects Supervisor - Ken Ralston
Optical Photography Supervisor - Ed Jones
Visual Effects Camera Operator - Scott Farrar
Supervising Model Maker - Steve Gawley
Assistant Director/Unit Production Manager:
ILM - Ian Bryce
Matte and Roto Supervisor - Annie Elvin
Animation Supervisor - Wes Takahashi
Stop-Motion Animator - Tom St. Amand
Film Editor - Arthur Schmidt
Animation Editor - Nick Fletcher
Associate Editors: UK - Peter Lonsdale
and Colin Wilson
Assistant Editors: UK - Carin-Anne Strohmaier,
Andrew MacRitchie and Lynne Bailey Smith
Supervising Sound Editors - Charles L. Campbell
and Louis L. Edemann
Re-Recording Mixers - Robert Knudson,
John Boyd, Don Digirolamo and Jim Fitzpatrick
Foley Artists - Ellen Heuer and John Roesch
Foley Recordist - Greg Orloff
Music - Alan Silvestri


Awards

1989 Academy Awards
Best Film Editing - Arthur Schmidt (Won)
Best Sound Effects Editing - Charles L. Campbell
and Louis L. Edemann (Won)
Best Visual Effects - Ken Ralston,
Richard Williams, Ed Jones and George Gibbs (Won)
Special Achievement Award - Richard Williams (Won)
-----------------------
Best Cinematography - Dean Cundey (Nominated)
Best Art Direction - Elliot Scott and Peter Howitt (Nominated)
Best Sound - Robert Knudson, John Boyd,
Don Digirolamo and Tony Dawe (Nominated)


Review
It has been several years since WHO FRAMED ROGER RABBIT was shown on television and VHS. It seemed like an adult-oriented, edgy, live-action/animation fantasy comedy that got misconstrued as a family movie despite its intention to aim at mature audiences. It is a homage to noir films and those classic cartoons produced in the Golden Age of Animation. It's mainly due to director Robert Zemeckis, animator Richard Williams and filmmaker Steven Spielberg's creative talents that had this filmed and animated in both cinematic components that had streamlined together in a film as both live-action and animation.

Many years in the making, the effects have aged well in ROGER RABBIT, and so has the story, which is so rich in laughter and mystery. The movie contains cartoon characters. Some were from the novel or original, and others got borrowed from copyright holders like Warner Bros and the film's production company Disney. Many people will know these characters, such as Mickey Mouse, Donald Duck, Bugs Bunny and Daffy Duck.

The cast was well-suited to their performances, including the late Bob Hoskins, who takes on the gruff, bigoted human detective Eddie Valiant. Christopher Lloyd plays the sharp, sinister role of the mysterious, cold-hearted Judge Doom. Kathleen Turner is hardly recognisable in her voice as Roger Rabbit's seductive beauty of a wife, Jessica.

Though I haven't seen ROGER RABBIT for a long time, I remember it fondly. It's an excellent movie that surely entertains, excites and brings joy to people of all ages.

Star rating: (9/10) Excellent Movie