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  1. Jun 22, 2023 · Never let it be said that Jessica Rabbit doesn't know how to make an entrance. On June 22, 1988, Roger Rabbit's better half extended her shapely leg through the stage curtains...

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    Personality

    She attests to Eddie Valiant that "I'm not bad, I'm just drawn that way". Indeed, she proves herself to be selfless and compassionate throughout the movie. Although she seems cool and distant, she has a soft spot for Roger, whom she married because he "makes her laugh", is a better lover than a driver, and that he's magnificent and "better than Goofy". She calls him her "honey bunny" and "darling". She adores him beyond measure and is irrefutably loyal to him. As proof of her love, she tells...

    Physical appearance

    Jessica is a statuesque tall, voluptuous and gorgeous woman with a curvy and slender hourglass figure with a narrow waist and large, broad hips. She has fair skin and long, luxurious red (or orange) hair with side-bangs that usually cover her right eye. Her green eyes are heavy-lidded and seductive with long dark lashes and accented by shimmering lavender eye shadow. Her nose is fairly small, especially in relation to her full, red pouting lips. Her ensemble consists of a red sequined straple...

    Jessica is first seen from behind the stage curtains at the Ink and Paint Club, singing "Why Don't You Do Right?" After her show, Marvin Acme, owner of Toontown and founder of the Acme Corporation, enters her dressing room to compliment her performance. Unknown to either of them, Eddie Valiant, hired to investigate the alleged affair between the two, has followed them. Though he is caught and thrown out by Bongo the Gorilla, acting as the club bouncer, when peeking through the keyhole of Jess...

    Spin-off short films

    Jessica makes brief cameos in the three Roger Rabbittheatrical shorts. She first appears as a nurse in Tummy Trouble, pushing a cart carrying baby bottles, followed by appearing as a damsel-in-distress tied up to roller coaster tracks by Droopy in Roller Coaster Rabbit. In the final short film Trail Mix-Up, Roger fantasizes over her as a park ranger, calling her a "babe in the woods" and panting like a dog. She also reappears after the filming of the short film Tummy Trouble, where Roger then...

    Comics

    Jessica, alongside the other central characters, appears in the graphic novel Resurrection of Doom. Jessica also appeared frequently in the subsequent Roger Rabbit comic book series, and she had her own feature in most issues of Roger Rabbit's Toontown, such as “Beauty Parlor Bedlam”, where she comes face to face with female weasel counterpart, Winnie.

    With the success of the film and upon the opening of Disney-MGM Studios on May 1, 1989, the film's characters featured prominently in the company. After taking the Studio Backlot Tour, various props decorated the streets including two different photo opportunities with Jessica: a glittery cardboard cutout and "The Loony Bin" photoshop which allowed...

    According to Gary K. Wolf, the original creator of Jessica in his book Who Censored Roger Rabbit, she is based on Droopy's girlfriend, Red Hot Riding Hood/Miss Vavoom (a cartoon character he lusted...
    Some test footage showed a different Jessica, voiced by Russi Taylor, the previous voice of Minnie Mouse.
    Jessica's dress was originally going to sparkle all through the film, but this would have been too expensive at the time. It was done for only her "Why Don't You Do Right" scene, and after that it...
    In 2008, Jessica was selected by Empire Magazine as one of The 100 Greatest Movie Characters of All Time.
    • Indiana Jones (Raiders Of The Lost Ark) The entire opening sequence of Raiders Of The Lost Ark, from the moment the Paramount logo dissolves into a South American jungle peak right up to Indy’s daring sea-plane escape, is pure cinematic gold.
    • Darth Vader (Star Wars) A character as iconic as Darth Vader deserves an equally iconic entrance. As a smoke-filled corridor lies in recovery following the shoot-out that just raged inside it, Stormtroopers flood in and promptly make way for the arrival of their apparent leader.
    • Hannibal Lecter (The Silence Of The Lambs) Never before has a man acting extremely calm and polite been so utterly terrifying. Anthony Hopkins’ turn as serial killer Hannibal Lecter is an absolute acting masterclass from start to finish and his opening scene is perhaps the character’s defining moment.
    • Quint (Jaws) I could easily have also included the first full sighting of Bruce the shark in this list, as the moment when he suddenly emerges from the depths still provides quite the shock no matter how real he may actually look.
  2. Sep 25, 2013 · In Robert Zemeckis ’s 1988 comedy-noir Who Framed Roger Rabbit, the wildly voluptuous Jessica Rabbit took the femme fatale archetype to a cheeky new dimension. Her look with its crazy curves,...

  3. Jessica Rabbit is Roger Rabbit's wife and the tritagonist of the book and movie. In the book, she was an amoral, up-and-coming star and former comic character, over whom her estranged husband, comic strip star Roger Rabbit, obsessed.

  4. Jessica Rabbit is a fictional character in the novel Who Censored Roger Rabbit? and its film adaptation, Who Framed Roger Rabbit. She is depicted as the human toon wife of Roger Rabbit in various Roger Rabbit media.

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  6. Jessica Rabbit is the tritagonist of the 1988 hybrid film Who Framed Roger Rabbit. In the book, she was an amoral, up-and-coming star and former comic character, over whom her estranged husband, comic strip star Roger Rabbit, obsessed.

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