
Now the Toon mourners pick up on it and join in. Much to the funeral Director's amazement, the crank starts PLINKING out the tune to "POP GOES THE WEASEL". Give us a sign, brother Herman, that you've arrived. The Director starts to turn the crank lowering the coffin into the grave. He moves around to the other side of the tree as Maroon passes and starts wending his way through the crowd.įoghorn Leghorn nods to the funeral DIRECTOR, a pasty-faced human in a black mourning coat. We have been watching the proceedings from his POV. Is leaning up against a palm tree on the hill. That high, high, I say, that high-larious place up in the sky.įoghorn Leghorn dramatically points skyward. We shed no tears for we know that Marvin is going to a better place. Today we commit the body of brother Acme to the cold, I say, cold, cold ground.

The eulogy is being delivered in a familiar blustery Southern VOICE. Everyone from the famous to the not-so-famous is in attendance. Clustered around a gravesite are the mourners. Nearby, Marvin Acne's funeral is in progress. CUT TO:Ī hearse, and a line of black limos are parked in the lane. He calmly crosses the street and ducks behind the cemetery entranceway as Maroon's Packard ROARS through.Īs Valiant starts to walk up the hill. FOREST LAWN CEMETERY - RED CAR STOP - DAYĪ Red Car pulls up. Anyway, what you're about to see is the script for the exact sequence, as per said early draft of the movie:Īfter Eddie entrusts Roger to Dolores, he then boards a Red Car for.ĮXT.
WHO FRAMED ROGER RABBIT JESSICA RABBIT SCENE MOVIE
You probably have heard the story, yes, I know, but here's the exact dialog for the scenes, according to a draft of this movie that I found online (dating from 1986), as written by Jeffrey Price and Peter Seaman. Great graphic novel that had a fascinating sequel book as well, "The Resurrection of Doom".

The sequence is also included as part of the story in the Marvel graphic novel based on the film. Eddie ends up showering because the weasels painted a toon pig head onto Eddie and he uses turpentine to remove it in the shower. This should be pretty much old news to everyone here since it's on the 2-disc DVD. Next time, I'll explain in full.īig Disney Fan wrote:The whole article can be found here. You know what it is? Here's a hint: part of this particular scene can be found on the 15th Anniversary DVD as a standalone bonus feature. The original screenplay of the movie, titled "Who Shot Roger Rabbit", called for a whole day and a whole night to pass by after Eddie entrusts Roger to Dolores and before Jessica meets Eddie in his office as the latter emerges from the bathroom, presumably after taking a shower. The Hollywood hare's life is hanging in the balance, yet Eddie uses this time to take a shower? Does that make any sense? Wait! This is no time for Eddie to take a shower! Judge Doom and the Toon Patrol are onto Roger. The next scene after this one shows Jessica Rabbit coming into Eddie's office as Eddie emerges from the bathroom, slightly wet and without wearing a shirt.

Some movie buffs had been bothered by a certain scene in "Who Framed Roger Rabbit": specifically, the scene in the Terminal Bar, roughly halfway through the movie, where Eddie Valiant, following his removing himself from the handcuffs courtesy of a handy saw, leaves Roger with his longtime girlfriend, Dolores, and says to her that he's returning to his office to check on something.
