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==Synopsis== ==Synopsis==
The movie is fairly faithful to the ]. It begins with an animated prologue (by ]), which establishes the ] culture and folklore history used by both the book and film for their ]. It describes the rabbit version of ], in which the ] "Lord Frith" creates the world, and in a ], deems the mischievous rabbit prince ] and his descendants to be forever hunted but forever agile survivors.
The movie begins with a prologue (animated in an ] style of ] art by ]), explaining the creation of the world as seen by rabbits: All animals were created the same by the sun god, "Lord Frith," and ate grass. The rabbit prince El-ahrairah's kind multiplied beyond control, dismaying the other animals, so Frith offered an ultimatum: "Find ways to control your people, or I shall find ways to control them." El-ahrairah boasted that his people were the strongest in the world, that they couldn't be stopped. An angered Frith then granted gifts to the other animals, such as the ], ], ], ] and ], including a "fierce desire to hunt and slay" rabbits. Seeing the Black Rabbit of Inlé (a lapine version of the ]), a frightened El-ahrairah dug underground to escape Frith's wrath. Frith approached him and asked, "Have you seen El-ahrairah? I have a gift for him" as well; El-ahrairah feigned ignorance, so Frith knowingly offered his gift to the burrowing stranger "instead." To avoid revealing his identity, El-ahrairah refused to stop burrowing and was blessed on the behind: His tail turned shining white, his legs, ears and feet lengthened, and he tore across the country faster than anything yet created. Frith admonished him:


The story is set in the ] countryside. A peaceful rabbit warren is disrupted by the concerns of the ] runt "]", who foresees the end of the warren and persuades others to leave with him. Despite the disparaging view and and wishes of the Chief Rabbit, the band sets off, including his older brother ], the burly ] and five others. An attempt is made to prevent their departure, by another high-ranking rabbit, Holly, but he is forcefully prevented from deterring them and returns to the warren unsuccessful.
{{cquote|All the world will be your enemy, Prince With a Thousand Enemies. And when they catch you, they will kill you. But first, they must catch you—digger, listener, runner, Prince with the swift warning. Be cunning and full of tricks, and your people will never be destroyed.}}


After various adventures, the band (less Violet, who is snatched by a ]) reaches a warren which appears to be inhabited by friendly rabbits. Fiver is suspicious and senses something wrong; the rest are grateful and ridicule him as being ]. Disillusioned, he leaves. Bigwig goes to seek him, and is caught in a ] - the price for the warren's existence is the ] subject that the local farmers put food out and will occasionally trap rabbits from there. Shocked, the band move on rather than stay. They discover a farm, Nuthanger farm, which contains a ] of domesticated female rabbits as well as other animals, including a ] and ], and unexpectedly are found by Captain Holly of their old warren. He is ], injured, exhausted and in shock. He tells of the destruction of the warren and the horror he miraculously survived. He then mentions a warren he found called Efrafa but he collapses before he can say any more. Shortly after, Fiver finds the home he had always felt was waiting for them - the titular ']'. The rabbits eagerly ascend the steep climb to miraculously discover an empty space suitable to live in.
The main story's setting is the English countryside near a railway which crosses over a bridge. Fiver, a weak and nervous runt rabbit, and his brother Hazel live together in the shelter of the Sandleford Warren. Fiver has a ]: He can see the future. While Fiver and Hazel are outside, Fiver has a horrible vision of Sandleford being destroyed. At first doubtful, Hazel comes to believe Fiver and they decide to tell Threarah, the Warren's elderly Chief Rabbit. Guarding the entrance is Bigwig, an unusually large rabbit and a member of Sandleford's Owsla (the "military" of a rabbit warren), who is promptly ordered to send the two away by Holly, the captain of the warren's Owsla; Hazel convinces Bigwig to let them pass ("When have I ever asked to see the Chief Rabbit before?"). Upon hearing of Fiver's vision, Threarah is patronisingly sceptical and dismisses them abruptly; he then scolds Bigwig for not following Holly's orders.


The rabbits settle in, developing their own warren. Hazel is informally recognized as their Chief Rabbit: Hazel-rah. They befriend an ascerbic injured ], Kehaar, who observes they have no females, and offers to survey the local area for them when healed. He is absent a long time; the rabbits fearing he has abandoned them return to Nuthanger farm to free the ]s, but although some escape, Hazel is shot and injured, and manages to conceal himself before collapsing, as his life hangs in the balance. Fiver, however, is not convinced that Hazel is dead, and in an abstract scene covered by the ] song "]," the Black Rabbit of Inle, the Lapine ], is portrayed as leading Fiver to find Hazel, who finally returns to the warren and slowly heals.
Later that night, Fiver, Hazel and at least 20 other rabbits that have heard about the pair's plan, all leave the warren. After the Owsla catches many of them, the lineup of escapees is limited to 8 rabbits:
* Hazel,
*Fiver,
*Dandelion (a storyteller and a friend of Hazel),
*Pipkin (a runt like Fiver, only smaller and plumper),
*Blackberry (a large, quiet rabbit who is an intelligent problem solver),
*Silver (Threarah's nephew),
*Violet (a ]) and
* Bigwig, who has left the Owsla to join them.
They are then confronted by Captain Holly; a fight threatens between Hazel and Holly, but Bigwig breaks it up before it starts. Holly flees back into the warren and the rabbits move on through a threatening forest.


Kehaar returns having identified Efrafa as the main warren which may have females. Holly, who knows of Efrafa, begs them not to go there, describing it as highly militarized and almost fascist in its paranoid protection of the state and in its crushing of civil liberties of its citizens. Hazel, however, feels they have no choice but to seek does from Efrafa for their own long term survival as a warren.
The rabbits soon come to a shore. They cannot swim across it and, to make matters worse, a nearby ] sees the rabbits. The group thinks quick and, thanks to Blackberry, find a wooden plank to carry them across the water. After travelling across a road, the group decides to rest in an overgrown enclosure near a field. While the other rabbits sleep, Violet wakes up and finds food. As she eats, a nearby hawk swoops down, picks her up and carries her away, shortening the lineup to 7 rabbits.


A number of the warren visit Efrafa, and Bigwig stays to infiltrate the colony. He meets the Chief Rabbit, the powerful General Woundwort, who is impressed at his size and strength, and makes him an offficer of the warren, responsible for compliance and behavior of the rabbits there. Meanwhile Hazel, Blackberry, and Kehaar are exploring possible escape routes for future. Bigwig finds that beneath the surface, there is much discontent, and easily recruits several would-be escapees to his cause. Having arranged a meeting point with Kehaar, at sunset, Bigwig tackles the guard, whilst the rest of the escapees flee. They use a boat to cross a stream, evading pursuit, and leaving the Efrafan guards confounded.
After escaping from a rat-infested shed in a cemetery, the group encounters Cowslip. Cowslip is a sleazy, gentleman-like rabbit who appears kind and lets the group stay in his warren. Although the rabbits are completely oblivious to the fact that Cowslip is hiding something, Fiver is suspicious: "We should have nothing to do with that Catholic." He decides to exit the warren and hides under a tree in the next field, telling Hazel this is not their ultimate destination. Bigwig runs up in anger to argue with him and, after storming off in a huff, is caught in a snare. Fiver runs for help and fetches the rest of the Sandleford travellers (Cowslip refusing to join); he and Pipkin chew through the peg, which slackens the wire. Bigwig is freed from the snare, but apparently dead. He is given a short eulogy by the group: "My heart has joined the ], for my friend stopped running today." Fiver then scolds them for settling so easily for a trap-infested life—when Bigwig interrupts swearing vengeance on Cowslip. He nearly collapses again, so joins the group when they decide to move on.


Some days later, however, it transpires that Efrafa's trackers have found their trail, and the General himself is coming with a hand-picked group to revenge himself and recapture the escapees. Despite fear, the rabbits decide to fight rather than capitulate. Hazel, still badly wounded, attempts to reason and offers an alliance of warrens rather than conflict, but is dismissed and told to tell the warren to return or be killed. The waren dig themselves in and are ], and Fiver slips into a ] in which he envisions "a dog loose in the woods". His moans scare the Efrafans, and awakening he realises that their hope for victory is to free the dog from the farm and lead him to the warren, where presumably he will attack the Efrafans. Dedicated to killing Bigwig, the Gemeral is unconcerned and allows a few of the smaller rabbits to bolt, as they head to the farm. Hazel, who goes with, offers his life for his warrens, in a silent prayer, if need be. They free the dog, and taunt him to follow them uphill, but Hazel is caught by the cat, and then saved by the farm owners' young daughter.
The rabbits discover Nuthanger Farm, where they rest under a wagon. Hazel wakes up Pipkin and they explore the farm, where they encounter a hutch with white domestic rabbits in the barn. He offers to rescue them, but is met with mostly bewilderment. Pipkin warns Hazel that the farm's cat, Tabs, has just caught sight of them, so Hazel quickly says his goodbye to the farm rabbits. Outside, Hazel openly taunts Tabs: "Can you run? … I think not"; this distracts her enough for the pair to avoid her pounce and escape.


The General finally breaks into the warren, but fearful of the strange noises and other rumors, his soldiers will not enter. he goes in first, and is ]ed by Bigwig. They fight, both are near exhaustion. Woundwort tries to persuade Bigwig to surrender, asking him why he chooses to fight an unwinnable battle; Bigwig shocks the General by replying, "My Chief told me to defend this run." Woundwort stammers "Your ... Chief?"—imagining a rabbit even bigger and stronger than Bigwig. Suddenly, the dog arrives, and rapidly kills most of the General's soldiers. The General, whose reputation is that he once fought off a dog, attacks the dog... but no outcome of that battle is shown. The General is not seen again and neither is his body found, but his death is not confirmed either. His memory becomes a ] in rabbit legend, used by parents to frighten their children into obedience.
While travelling through the undergrowth, the rabbits hear strange moans, calling for "Bigwig!" Convinced he is being summoned by the Black Rabbit of Death, he intends to succumb to the groan when out of the shadows steps a wounded, pale grey rabbit: Captain Holly from the Sandleford Warren. He tells the rabbits of the destruction of the warren and the horror he miraculously survived. He then mentions a warren he found called Efrafa but he collapses before he can say any more.


The epilogue shows the warren some years later. Hazel is old and tired, but his warren is thriving. The stories of their exploits, distorted, ]ologized, and transformed into ] stories, have long since entered Lapine folklore and are retold unrecognized. Unexpectedly he is visited in his warren by a shadowy shape he cannot make out. The rabbit reveals himself to be the Black Rabbit of Inle, and comments that Hazel is tired, inviting Hazel to join his officers in his warren. In a recap of other mystical scenes in the film, Hazel follows the stranger, discarding his body, and leaves for whatever afterlife awaits, the Black Rabbit and El-ahrairah leading towards towards the sun, which metamorphoses into Frith, and into the lapine afterlife.
At last, after much searching, Fiver finds his hill: ]. The rabbits eagerly ascend the steep climb to miraculously discover an empty ] under a beech hanger that they can live in:

:'''Dandelion:''' O Frith on the hills, he made it all for us!
:'''Hazel:''' Frith may have made it, but Fiver found it.

After a day or two, Bigwig discovers a wounded ] named Kehaar. Kehaar has a broken wing and cannot fly, a result from a run-in with Tabs. His wounded wing has forced him to take refuge on Watership Down and co-exist with the rabbits. Meanwhile, Hazel realizes they have no ] rabbits, or does, since Violet was killed by the hawk, and therefore cannot have ]s. Kehaar is good-naturedly tricked into offering to help the rabbits find mates—help he has long intended to give, to repay Bigwig for helping him find food. After some uncertainty about the health of his mending wing, Kehaar does soar into the sky, and the rabbits wait for him to return when he finds mates.

A week passes by and Kehaar has not returned. Thinking that Kehaar has deserted them, Hazel, Dandelion and Blackberry go to Nuthanger Farm to rescue the hutch rabbits they met earlier. While the group tries to set the hutch rabbits free, two ] hear strange noises coming from the barn; the dog awakes and begins to bark. The men enter the barn, one armed with a ]; as they shine a torch around the barn, the domestic rabbits keep still while the three frightened wild rabbits make a break for the fields. A farmer fires one shot from his gun, piercing Hazel on his right thigh, and he collapses into a pile of ]; his friends watch in shock as the farmers debate whether or not Hazel was shot. Blackberry and Dandelion return to Watership with the news; Fiver, however, is not convinced that Hazel is dead. Another abstract scene, animated to the song "]," portrays the Black Rabbit leading Fiver to Hazel, wounded but still alive in a hidden pipe.

The next morning, Kehaar returns to Watership Down. Fiver leads him to Hazel, from whose wounded leg Kehaar removes shotgun pellets with his beak. Hazel asks Kehaar what he found; he reports that he found no mates, but discovered Efrafa. Holly then resumes telling the rabbits about Efrafa: It is a strict, militarized warren—nearly fascist in its paranoid protection of the state and in its crushing of civil liberties of its citizens—located about a mile or so from Watership Down. He was himself captured and barely escaped, and only with the help of two Efrafans and a fortunate encounter with a passing ] running over his pursuers. He begs avoiding it all together; Hazel, however, feels they have no choice but to engage Efrafa.

On their ensuing ], the group encounters a fox. Impulsively, Bigwig leads it to a brush and inadvertently into a member of an Efrafan patrol, which it kills. From the sky, Kehaar warns of more on the way; again impulsively, Bigwig volunteers to stay, infiltrate Efrafa and get does to escape to Watership with him. Bigwig is "captured" by Efrafan scouts assaulting an escapee and is brought to their warren. He meets the Chief Rabbit of Efrafa, the brutish General Woundwort, and persuades the wary General into first joining Efrafa and then, impressed with Bigwig's size, Efrafa's Owsla. Meanwhile, while planning an escape route, Hazel, Blackberry, and Kehaar discover a tethered boat along the river, which reminds them of the plank they used to float to Watership Down.

In time, Bigwig meets Hyzenthlay and Blackavar, the two rabbits that helped Holly escape: Hyzenthlay is a very rebellious doe under intense watch by the Owsla. Blackavar has tried to escape Efrafa regularly to the point where he has had his ears chewed off, an example of what punishment awaits an escapee. He gradually talks Hyzenthlay into following him to Watership Down, along with several other does. He then surreptitiously meets Kehaar to finalize the escape plan. Later, Woundwort questions Bigwig about meeting Kehaar and leading the fox into a patrol; Bigwig feigns innocence. To test his loyalty, Woundwort orders Bigwig to follow a patrol set out to capture the Watership rabbits, ordering a captain to tail him.

At sunset, with a storm brewing, Bigwig, Blackavar, Hyzenthlay and a few other does manage to escape to the "iron road," the train tracks where Holly had barely escaped Efrafa and which subsequently the Efrafans try to avoid. Woundwort and his Owsla catch up and corner the group; suddenly, under glare of lightning, Kehaar attacks, surprising the Efrafans. The escapees run to the riverbed, where Hazel and the others lead them into the boat. As Hazel hastily chews the boat's tether, the Efrafans confront them once again, Woundwort vowing to finish them off; just as they're about to rush the boat, Bigwig shouts that Kehaar has returned, distracting the Efrafans enough to push off and safely float away to Watership Down.

Days later, Silver exclaims that General Woundwort and Efrafa's Owsla are coming to attack Watership Down. The rabbits begin to burrow deep inside the ], closing up the entrances along the way, when Hazel has an idea: He requests an audience with Woundwort, suggesting an alliance of free and independent warrens. Displaying an initial glimpse of interest, he quickly dismisses the "preposterous" notion in a fit of vengeance; he allows Hazel to return with his terms: Give up the Efrafan deserters, or the Watership rabbits will be slaughtered.

Hazel returns to the warren with the Efrafans close behind in full force; they begin to dig into the warren. Fiver begins to convulse, emitting load moans; the otherworldly sound reaches the Efrafans, who stop digging and begin to express fear of the "great white bird" and "river beast," rumoured to be powerful allies of the Watership rabbits, when Woundwort snaps them back to their task at hand. Fiver continues to moan about "a dog's loose in the woods"; this inspires Hazel to leave with three of his fastest runners. Woundwort orders his troops to let them go, interested only in finding and killing Bigwig, whom he believes is their Chief.

Hazel has Hyzenthlay and Blackberry wait in hidden locations between Watership Down and Nuthanger Farm, while he and Dandelion head straight to Nuthanger. Running towards the farm, Hazel offers up a prayer:

{{cquote|Lord Frith, I know you've looked after us well, and it's wrong to ask even more of you. But my people are in terrible danger, and so I would like to make a bargain with you. My life in return for theirs.}}

Meanwhile at Watership Down, General Woundwort and his cronies have entered the warren. The rabbits retreat yet deeper into the warren, where they conceal Bigwig under loose dirt. Remaining behind on his own, Blackavar valiantly confronts his old Chief, but the General kills him easily.

Arriving at the farm, Hazel tries to free the farm's savage ]. While gnawing at the dog's lead, he notices Tabs stalking a waiting Dandelion and thumps his leg in warning; this succeeds in awakening the dog, who breaks free and chases Dandelion out of the gate and into the field. Hazel tries to return to Watership, but is pounced upon by Tabs, who taunts Hazel with his own words from their earlier encounter: "Can you run? I think not. … I think … not." Fortunately, the farmer's daughter arrives, scolds Tabs for her actions and sets Hazel free.

Dandelion leads the dog to where Blackberry is hiding, then conceals himself; when the dog catches sight of Blackberry, the dog chases him. Similarly, Blackberry leads the dog to Hyzenthlay's hiding place and also conceals himself; however, when she flees, the exhausted dog instead doubles back and comes close to discovering a panicked Blackberry. Hyzenthlay desperately rushes back, inadvertantly flushing two ] out of a brush; his attention regained, the dog resumes chasing Hyzenthlay towards Watership Down.

As Woundwort continues through the warren, he passes over the buried Bigwig, who reveals himself and strikes. They both fight, nearly to Bigwig's death. Woundwort tries to persuade Bigwig to surrender, asking him why he chooses to fight an unwinnable battle; Bigwig shocks the General by replying, "My Chief told me to defend this run." Woundwort stammers "Your … Chief?"—imagining a rabbit even bigger and stronger than Bigwig.

Just then, Hyzenthlay arrives; the dog sees the invading Efrafan rabbits and begins to slaughter them. The commotion, as well as Bigwig's revelation, draws Woundwort out of the warren. The dog catches sight of Woundwort and viciously charges at him. Woundwort—uncharacteristic of rabbits but characteristic of him—hurls himself at the dog with a snarl on his face. The outcome of this duel is not revealed; the narration explains that Woundwort's body was never found, but his memory becomes a ] that local rabbit parents use to frighten their children into obedience.

The film ends several years later. Hazel is now the Chief Rabbit of Watership Down. He is old and tired, but his warren is thriving. A rabbit (believed to be El-ahrairah) comes to him, revealing himself to also be the Black Rabbit of Death, and invites Hazel to join his Owsla. Lines from the opening creation myth are repeated as Hazel peacefully passes on and follows El-ahrairah towards the sun—which metamorphoses into Frith—and into the lapine afterlife.


==Comparison to the novel== ==Comparison to the novel==

Revision as of 12:37, 23 September 2007

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1978 British film
Watership Down
Poster for Watership Down
Directed byMartin Rosen
Written byOriginal novel:
Richard Adams
Screenplay:
Martin Rosen
Produced byMartin Rosen
StarringJohn Hurt (voice)
Richard Briers (voice)
Michael Graham Cox (voice)
Simon Cadell (voice)
Harry Andrews (voice)
Edited byTerry Rawlings
Music byMike Batt (song "Bright Eyes")
(sung by) Art Garfunkel
Angela Morley
Malcolm Williamson (incidental music)
Distributed byAVCO Embassy Pictures
Release datesOctober 19, 1978 (UK) November 1, 1978 (US)
Running time93 min
CountryUK
LanguageEnglish

Watership Down is an animated film directed by Martin Rosen and based on the book Watership Down by Richard Adams. It was released in October 1978 and was largely financed by Jake Eberts' company, Goldcrest Films. After a slow start upon release, it became the sixth most popular film of 1979 at the British box office.

The film featured the voices of John Hurt, Richard Briers, Harry Andrews, Simon Cadell, Nigel Hawthorne and Roy Kinnear, among others, and was the last film appearance of Zero Mostel as the voice of Kehaar, the gull.

Art Garfunkel's British No.1 hit, "Bright Eyes", was also featured, although in a different arrangement from the version released as a record. The musical score was by Angela Morley and Malcolm Williamson.

Synopsis

The movie is fairly faithful to the book of the same title. It begins with an animated prologue (by John Canemaker), which establishes the Lapine culture and folklore history used by both the book and film for their context. It describes the rabbit version of Creation, in which the sun god "Lord Frith" creates the world, and in a mixed blessing, deems the mischievous rabbit prince El-ahrairah and his descendants to be forever hunted but forever agile survivors.

The story is set in the English countryside. A peaceful rabbit warren is disrupted by the concerns of the mystic runt "Fiver", who foresees the end of the warren and persuades others to leave with him. Despite the disparaging view and and wishes of the Chief Rabbit, the band sets off, including his older brother Hazel, the burly Bigwig and five others. An attempt is made to prevent their departure, by another high-ranking rabbit, Holly, but he is forcefully prevented from deterring them and returns to the warren unsuccessful.

After various adventures, the band (less Violet, who is snatched by a hawk) reaches a warren which appears to be inhabited by friendly rabbits. Fiver is suspicious and senses something wrong; the rest are grateful and ridicule him as being paranoid. Disillusioned, he leaves. Bigwig goes to seek him, and is caught in a snare - the price for the warren's existence is the taboo subject that the local farmers put food out and will occasionally trap rabbits from there. Shocked, the band move on rather than stay. They discover a farm, Nuthanger farm, which contains a hutch of domesticated female rabbits as well as other animals, including a cat and dog, and unexpectedly are found by Captain Holly of their old warren. He is in extremis, injured, exhausted and in shock. He tells of the destruction of the warren and the horror he miraculously survived. He then mentions a warren he found called Efrafa but he collapses before he can say any more. Shortly after, Fiver finds the home he had always felt was waiting for them - the titular 'Watership Down'. The rabbits eagerly ascend the steep climb to miraculously discover an empty space suitable to live in.

The rabbits settle in, developing their own warren. Hazel is informally recognized as their Chief Rabbit: Hazel-rah. They befriend an ascerbic injured seagull, Kehaar, who observes they have no females, and offers to survey the local area for them when healed. He is absent a long time; the rabbits fearing he has abandoned them return to Nuthanger farm to free the does, but although some escape, Hazel is shot and injured, and manages to conceal himself before collapsing, as his life hangs in the balance. Fiver, however, is not convinced that Hazel is dead, and in an abstract scene covered by the iconic song "Bright Eyes," the Black Rabbit of Inle, the Lapine personification of death, is portrayed as leading Fiver to find Hazel, who finally returns to the warren and slowly heals.

Kehaar returns having identified Efrafa as the main warren which may have females. Holly, who knows of Efrafa, begs them not to go there, describing it as highly militarized and almost fascist in its paranoid protection of the state and in its crushing of civil liberties of its citizens. Hazel, however, feels they have no choice but to seek does from Efrafa for their own long term survival as a warren.

A number of the warren visit Efrafa, and Bigwig stays to infiltrate the colony. He meets the Chief Rabbit, the powerful General Woundwort, who is impressed at his size and strength, and makes him an offficer of the warren, responsible for compliance and behavior of the rabbits there. Meanwhile Hazel, Blackberry, and Kehaar are exploring possible escape routes for future. Bigwig finds that beneath the surface, there is much discontent, and easily recruits several would-be escapees to his cause. Having arranged a meeting point with Kehaar, at sunset, Bigwig tackles the guard, whilst the rest of the escapees flee. They use a boat to cross a stream, evading pursuit, and leaving the Efrafan guards confounded.

Some days later, however, it transpires that Efrafa's trackers have found their trail, and the General himself is coming with a hand-picked group to revenge himself and recapture the escapees. Despite fear, the rabbits decide to fight rather than capitulate. Hazel, still badly wounded, attempts to reason and offers an alliance of warrens rather than conflict, but is dismissed and told to tell the warren to return or be killed. The waren dig themselves in and are beseiged, and Fiver slips into a trance in which he envisions "a dog loose in the woods". His moans scare the Efrafans, and awakening he realises that their hope for victory is to free the dog from the farm and lead him to the warren, where presumably he will attack the Efrafans. Dedicated to killing Bigwig, the Gemeral is unconcerned and allows a few of the smaller rabbits to bolt, as they head to the farm. Hazel, who goes with, offers his life for his warrens, in a silent prayer, if need be. They free the dog, and taunt him to follow them uphill, but Hazel is caught by the cat, and then saved by the farm owners' young daughter.

The General finally breaks into the warren, but fearful of the strange noises and other rumors, his soldiers will not enter. he goes in first, and is ambushed by Bigwig. They fight, both are near exhaustion. Woundwort tries to persuade Bigwig to surrender, asking him why he chooses to fight an unwinnable battle; Bigwig shocks the General by replying, "My Chief told me to defend this run." Woundwort stammers "Your ... Chief?"—imagining a rabbit even bigger and stronger than Bigwig. Suddenly, the dog arrives, and rapidly kills most of the General's soldiers. The General, whose reputation is that he once fought off a dog, attacks the dog... but no outcome of that battle is shown. The General is not seen again and neither is his body found, but his death is not confirmed either. His memory becomes a ghost story in rabbit legend, used by parents to frighten their children into obedience.

The epilogue shows the warren some years later. Hazel is old and tired, but his warren is thriving. The stories of their exploits, distorted, mythologized, and transformed into culture hero stories, have long since entered Lapine folklore and are retold unrecognized. Unexpectedly he is visited in his warren by a shadowy shape he cannot make out. The rabbit reveals himself to be the Black Rabbit of Inle, and comments that Hazel is tired, inviting Hazel to join his officers in his warren. In a recap of other mystical scenes in the film, Hazel follows the stranger, discarding his body, and leaves for whatever afterlife awaits, the Black Rabbit and El-ahrairah leading towards towards the sun, which metamorphoses into Frith, and into the lapine afterlife.

Comparison to the novel

Similarities

Unlike many animated features, the film faithfully emulated the dark and violent sophistication of the book. As a result, many reviewers took to warning parents that children might find the content highly disturbing. This attitude extended to when the animated TV series was marketed with the producers making an effort to reassure parents that the violence was softened and that the main characters would not be permanently harmed in their adventures.

Despite the aforementioned violence, the film currently retains a British "U" certificate for all home video releases. The film is also possibly the only U-rated film to include the phrase "piss off" (spoken by Kehaar to Hazel, as in the book). In the United States, the film is rated "PG" by the MPAA.

Some marketers in the US were also worried that the main promotional poster (see above) appeared too dark and may scare some children. The poster is actually showing Bigwig in a snare (his distinctive hair is clearly visible), and the image on the poster did not appear in the film, which has a far bloodier depiction of Bigwig in the snare.

Differences

Although the film was fairly faithful to the novel, several changes were made to the storyline:

  • The Watership Down warren is significantly smaller in the movie at the time of their expedition to Efrafa. By that point in the book it had grown to seventeen rabbits: the original eleven plus Strawberry (who joined them from Cowslip's warren), two other Sandleford survivors (Holly and Bluebell), and three hutch rabbits liberated from the farm (Clover, Boxwood, and Haystack). In the movie they are still only a band of eight—the original seven plus Holly.
  • In the novel, Hazel and his companions dig Watership Down Warren themselves, under the direction of Strawberry. In the film, Blackberry finds an empty warren already dug that they move into.
  • In the film, Blackavar is killed; in the novel this does not happen.
  • In the novel, when Holly finds the group he says he was attacked by Cowslip. However, in the film, it was the Efrafans who attacked Holly.
  • In the movie, all the hutch rabbits are re-captured by their human owners and never make it to the Down; in the novel three of four rabbits escape successfully.

These changes were most likely made to make the film easier to understand. Several characters were also taken away from the film (probably so there would be fewer characters to keep track of). 11 rabbits go on their trek to Watership Down. In the film, 8 leave (but 7 survive).

Also, the order in which some events occur is re-arranged, and the length of time spent in different places is changed. For example: in the movie Pipkin and Hazel make their first visit to Nuthanger farm during the journey to Watership Down. In the book they make their first visit much later, after the journey is over and they've been settled on Watership Down for a while. Additionally, in the movie the rabbits find Holly before finding the down, whereas in the novel they find him later.

And some characterizations are changed. For instance, the character of Silver takes on some of the attributes and actions of the absent Hawkbit, and Dandelion's primary roles in the book as the group's best scout and storyteller are almost entirely absent; his storytelling ability is alluded to a couple of times, but he never actually tells a story or does any scouting in the movie.

Critical acclaim

The movie was nominated for Hugo Award for Best Dramatic Presentation in 1979.

In 2004 the magazine Total Film named Watership Down the 47th greatest British film of all time.

In 2006 Channel 4 UK's "The 100 Greatest Cartoons" named "Watership Down" the 85th greatest Cartoon.

DVD releases

  • Watership Down Deluxe Edition (Region 2, UK) (2005)
  • Watership Down 25th Anniversary Edition (Region 4, Australia) (2003)
  • Watership Down (Region 1, USA) (2002)

Major cast

Hazel John Hurt
Fiver Richard Briers
Bigwig Michael Graham Cox
Holly John Bennett
Chief Rabbit Ralph Richardson
Blackberry Simon Cadell
Silver Terence Rigby
Pipkin Roy Kinnear
Dandelion Richard O'Callaghan
Cowslip Denholm Elliott
Kehaar Zero Mostel
General Woundwort Harry Andrews
Campion Nigel Hawthorne
Hyzenthlay Hannah Gordon
Blackavar Clifton Jones
Frith Michael Hordern
Black Rabbit Joss Ackland

Trivia

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  • In a scene that was cut from the theatrical version of Donnie Darko but included on the DVD, Donnie's class watches the Watership Down movie.
  • Gerry Beckley of the 1970s supergroup America penned a theme song for the Watership Down animated film. The song was not used for the film, but the group included it on their 1976 album Hideaway.
    • According to Beckley, singer/songwriter Harry Nilsson, who loved the book, helped Beckley with the song, offering critiques and suggestions.
    • The song was also featured in an episode of The Goodies in which they dressed as rabbits and parodied the film.
  • Quite a few of the actors who provided voices for Watership Down also starred in the BBC adaptation of J. R. R. Tolkien's The Lord of the Rings: Michael Hordern (Gandalf/Frith); Simon Cadell (Celeborn/Blackberry); Richard O'Callaghan (Merry/Dandelion); and Michael Graham Cox (Boromir/Bigwig).
  • John Hurt, who voiced Hazel in the film, returned to voice General Woundwort in the later Watership Down animated TV series.
  • John Hurt and Nigel Hawthorne also starred in the animated film of another novel by Richard Adams, The Plague Dogs, as Snitter and Dr. Robert Boycott respectively.
  • Mike Batt, who wrote "Bright Eyes", also wrote another song for the film which was not used. The song, "Losing Your Way in the Rain", has a very similar feeling and arrangement, and was recorded by ex-Zombies vocalist Colin Blunstone in 1979. It was later re-recorded by Art Garfunkel and used in the animated TV series.
  • The Musical group "Bright Eyes" has a song named "Watership Down", alluding to Art Garfunkel's song from the film.
  • In a scene from Wallace and Gromit: The Curse of the Were-Rabbit, Gromit turns on a radio which then starts playing "Bright Eyes".
  • The musical group Gravenhurst have a song called 'Flowers In Her Hair' on their mini album "Black Holes In The Sand". The song contains the line "there's a dog loose in the wood", a line spoken by Bigwig in the film and fiver said this later in his vision near the end.
  • In an Easter episode of the comedy "Vicar of Dibley", most of the main characters in the village dress up as Easter bunnies (unbeknownst to each other) and plan to place eggs in each garden. Soon when one or two "Easter bunnies" meet, they walk to the centre of the village and find a good dozen people dressed as rabbits, and Owen Newitt says "Any more and we'll be able to stage a production of bloody Watership Down!".

Notes

  1. "Watership Down". Toonhound. Retrieved 2006-12-18.

External links

Watership Down by Richard Adams
Adaptations
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