11 Famous Movies That Actually Taught Us Horrendous Life Lessons

3. Freeways Have Destroyed All Your Nostalgic Memories - Who Framed Roger Rabbit

Roger There was no better way for Robert Zemeckis to follow up his fifties throwback Back To The Future than with a celebration of everything was great about that era in cinema. A film noir infused with real life cartoon characters it€™s a movie nigh on impossible to not love. Eddie Valiant and Roger are such a unique double act that they€™re interaction is topped only by the joy of seeing Warner Bros. and Disney cartoons standing side by side. For the most part the film stays on the money. There€™s a nice little subtext about the segregation of toons (although much of the exploration was cut, despite elements remaining in the trailer) and a cool little alcoholic redemption story, but the big issue Who Framed Roger Rabbit dealt with is a little off the point. The introduction of the freeway in Los Angeles is, from an outsiders standpoint, a good thing; as was originally suggested when it was proposed it€™s a lot safer and avoids congestion. Residents of LA are a little less glowing about them and that€™s what comes out in the film; Valiant€™s trumpeting the public transport system, later ridiculing of the idea and the overall upbeat resolution all paint this as a bad thing. The issue was still fresh in 1987 when Roger Rabbit premiered, so I can understand why the LA based Zemeckis willingly added this, but there€™s enough benefits to freeways make this feel an oddly dated argument in an otherwise timeless film.
Contributor
Contributor

Film Editor (2014-2016). Loves The Usual Suspects. Hates Transformers 2. Everything else lies somewhere in the middle. Once met the Chuckle Brothers.