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The 2001 film Donnie Darko contains a six-foot tall rabbit named Frank, which haunts the titular character. Despite popular belief that this character was a reference to Harvey, Donnie Darko's writer/director Richard Kelly denies it. In an interview with Future Movies, he is quoted as saying: "I have never even seen the movie, it never occurred ...
The Song of Names is a 2019 drama film directed by François Girard. [7] An adaptation of the novel of the same name by Norman Lebrecht, it stars Tim Roth and Clive Owen as childhood friends from London whose lives have been changed by World War II. [7] The film was nominated for nine Canadian Screen Awards, winning five.
Monty Python and the Holy Grail is a 1975 British comedy film based on the Arthurian legend, written and performed by the Monty Python comedy group (Graham Chapman, John Cleese, Terry Gilliam, Eric Idle, Terry Jones, and Michael Palin) and directed by Gilliam and Jones in their feature directorial debuts.
The phrase is mentioned on the song "Klap Ya Handz" from the debut album of hip-hop group Das EFX, when Krayz Drayz utters the line "So zippity doo, da day, whoops I gots stuck." Tom Cruise uses the name of the song to help prove a point in the movie A Few Good Men. A variant of the song is sung by Kurt Russell in Overboard.
"Run, rabbit, run" is a lyric in the Pink Floyd song Breathe, possibly reflection of Roger Waters' anti-war sentiments. In 1980, sung by Fozzie Bear ( Frank Oz ) in Season 4, Episode 21 of The Muppet Show , as he attempts to protect a colony of rabbits, which he had accidentally conjured while attempting to perform the pulling a rabbit from a ...
Some movies stay in our hearts because of the way they're portrayed or the dialogues that hit the right spots, making them immortal in our memories. For instance, it’s been over 6 years since I ...
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Coonskin is a 1975 American live-action/animated satirical crime film written and directed by Ralph Bakshi.The film references the Uncle Remus folk tales, and satirizes the blaxploitation film genre as well as Disney's film Song of the South, adapted from the Uncle Remus folk tales. [1]