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Watership Down: Deluxe Edition

Score: 87%
Rating: PG
Publisher: Warner Brothers Home
                  Entertainment

Region: 1
Media: DVD/1
Running Time: 92 Mins.
Genre: Drama/Classic/Animated
Audio: English SDH
Subtitles: English, French

Features:

  • Watership Down: A Conversation with the Filmmakers - Writer/Director Martin Rosen and Editor Terry Rawlings
  • Defining a Style: Animation, Artists and Actor Joss Ackland Collaborate on the Creation of a Richard Adams' Character
  • Storyboard-to-Screen Multiangle Comparison of 4 Segments

Watership Down is an animated film based on the timeless children's classic by Richard Adams, although the subject matter depicted in the film can sometimes get a little bit rough. Watership Down, so named for the little community where the book/movie takes place (and one which has been faithfully represented in the movie, according to the featurette), tells the tale of a group of rabbits and their desire for freedom. We are first treated to the legend of how the god, Frith (Michael Hordern), created all of the animals. This segment is done in a very different animation style than the rest of the movie. Colors are bright and there is an Australian feel to the design. We discover that the rabbits sort of took advantage of everyone and ate up all the food, so Frith modified everyone so that they could hunt and kill the rabbits. But he also changed the rabbits, or the Prince of Rabbits, that is, so that he could run very quickly and elude his predators.

Once we get into the actual story, we meet Fiver (voiced by Richard Briers), a nervous little rabbit who is somewhat psychic, and his brother, Hazel (John Hurt), a level-headed rabbit but one who staunchly protects Fiver. Fiver is convinced that something terrible is coming to their warren and that everyone should vacate it immediately. However, the rabbit warrens are run somewhat militarily, with a chief and a police force known as the Owsler, run by Captain Holly (John Bennett) and Bigwig (Michael Graham Cox). When Hazel, Fiver and a group of the other rabbits decide to flee the warren in search of creating a new warren, they are stopped by Captain Holly but aided by Bigwig, who joins them in their flight. Fiver's premonition leads them to a high hill where they can set up their own warren, but the road to this paradise is fraught with danger. They first encounter a mostly empty warren where they are invited to stay. But it seems strange that there are so few rabbits there and that food magically appears. They soon find that a farmhouse nearby is responsible for the free food and missing rabbits, but that there are also a group of female rabbits living in cages. This is important since the group left with no does and without mates, the new warren will die off.

They also discover another warren, one run more like a concentration camp by General Woundwort (Harry Andrews), a vicious and vindicative leader who brutalizes any rabbit that gets out of line. With the help of an injured seagull (Zero Mostel) who acts as a scout and partner in battle, Bigwig is able to infiltrate the warren and convince a group of rabbits to defect. But Woundwort won't give up so easily and it's going to be a fight to the death for freedom.

This DVD is a re-release based on the 30 year anniversary of the film and includes a number of extras for fans such as the featurette where Martin Rosen (Writer/Director) and Terry Rawlings (Editor) talk about the trials and tribulations of bringing the book to the big screen. There's also one where we learn what it took to develop the unique style of Watership Down. Finally, there's a storyboard-to-screen multiangle comparison for 4 different segments, which was my least favorite.

I wondered how Watership Down would hold up against the test of time and I am happy to report that it is just as wonderful as it was when I originally saw it. The years have been kind to the soft and soothing watercolor backgrounds of the film and the story is just as moving as it ever was. I don't know how the children of today will react to this film, since it doesn't have the CGI they are so accustomed to, but it's a really sweet story that parents who saw it as a child will appreciate. There is a good bit of violence in this film, since snares are deadly, as are cats, other predators and fellow rabbits themselves. But Watership Down handles death well and in a non-gratuitous fashion. It's a really nice bit of nostalgia to share with a new generation.



-Psibabe, GameVortex Communications
AKA Ashley Perkins

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