Strange, controversial, beguiling: <i>Watership Down</i> is an uncommon film that cries out for this excellent collection of essays, providing much needed context and thoughtful analysis of unforgettable animation. Whether readers are rediscovering the film for the first time since childhood or hoping to gain new insight into a lingering obsession, they will find new information and understanding of what makes this film unique. This book offers fresh research into the troubled production and adaptation process, wide-ranging readings of the film’s story and aesthetics, and consideration of its reception and long influence. Essential reading for anyone interested in animation, horror, children’s cinema, environmentalism, or British film.

Malcolm Cook, Associate Professor in Film Studies, University of Southampton, UK

<i>Watership Down</i> is an enduring classic, but to date the 1978 film has not received scholarly attention. This volume is well-positioned to fill this gap, exploring the multifaceted nature of this beloved film across and organized by four thematic groupings and includes access to never-before-seen archival material. Groundbreaking and thorough, <i>Watership Down: Perspectives On and Beyond Animated Violence</i> is an essential text for undergraduate courses, graduate students and fans of the film alike.

Amy Ratelle, Research Officer and Independent Scholar, Jackman Humanities Institute, University of Toronto, Canada

<i>Watership Down</i> is a seminal and influential British feature animation. Catherine Lester’s varied and insightful collection of essays finally offers proper appraisal of the film’s social impact, emotional affect and political challenges. Drawing on archival sources and closely researched aspects of the film’s production, the readings that follow are refreshingly assured in discussing the power of animation itself to represent complex adult themes and challenging emotive imagery. This is not a book for those wishing to read about ‘funny bunnies’. These essays go down the rabbit hole and emerge from the warren with a revealing and penetrative gaze. Bright guys, burning like fire….

Paul Wells, Professor of Animation, Loughborough University, UK

Watership Down (Martin Rosen, 1978) is as controversial as it is beloved. Whether due to the tear-jerking hit song 'Bright Eyes' or its notorious representation of violence inflicted by and upon animated rabbits, the film retains the ability to move and shock audiences of all ages, remaining an important cultural touchstone decades after its original release.

This open access collection unites scholars and practitioners from a diversity of perspectives to consider the ongoing legacy of this landmark of British cinema and animation history. The authors provide nuanced discussions of Watership Down’s infamous animated depictions of violence, death and its contentious relationship with child audiences, as well as examinations of understudied aspects of the film including its musical score, use of language, its increasingly relevant political and environmental themes and its difficult journey to the screen, complete with behind-the-scenes photographs, documents and production artwork. As the first substantial work on Watership Down, this book is a valuable companion on the film for scholars, students and fans alike.

The eBook editions of this book are available open access under a CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 licence on bloomsburycollections.com.

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List of Illustrations
List of Tables
Notes on Contributors
Acknowledgements

Introduction: Watership Down in context
Catherine Lester (University of Birmingham, UK)

Part I: Bringing the Warren to Life

1. 'We consider the conduct of this film highly unsatisfactory and unprofessional': Film finances and Watership Down
Llewella Chapman (University of East Anglia, UK) and James Chapman (University of Leicester, UK)

2. Revisiting the production of Watership Down through the Arthur Humberstone Animation Archive
Klive Humberstone (Independent Researcher, UK), Nigel Humberstone (Independent Researcher, UK) and Chris Pallant (Canterbury Christ Church, UK)

3. 'Trying to Eat Grass that isn't There': Unearthing A lapine corpus in Richard Adams' Watership Down and its film adaptation
R. Grider (Independent Scholar, USA)

Part II: Animal Stories

4. Animating utopia: Aesthetic instability and the revolutionary gaze in the film adaptation of Watership Down
Lisa Mullen (University of Cambridge, UK)

5. 'Whenever They Catch You, They Will Kill You': Human-animal conflict in 1970s British children’s cinema
Noel Brown (Liverpool Hope University, UK)

6. They watered ship down: Eco-doom and ecopedagogy in adaptations of Watership Down and The Animals of Farthing Wood
Hollie Adams (Independent researcher, UK)

7. Watership Down under: When rabbits came to Australia
Dan Torre (RMIT University, Australia) and Lienors Torre (Deakin University, Australia)

Part III: Aesthetics of Sound and Image

8. 'English pastoral melodies': the traditions and connotations of Angela Morley’s musical score for Watership Down
Paul Mazey (Independent Scholar, UK)

9. 'I know now. A terrible thing is coming': Watership Down, music and/as horror
Leanne Weston (University of Warwick, UK)

10. Pastel dreams and crimson nightmares: Colour, aesthetics and Watership Down
Carolyn Rickards (Independent Scholar, UK)

11. Prince with a thousand faces: Shifting art-styles and the depiction of violence in Watership Down
Sam Summers (Middlesex University, UK)

Part IV: Affective Encounters with the Rabbit

12. Drawing blood: The forms and ethics of animated violence in Watership Down
Josh Schulze (University of Michigan, USA)

13. 'Won’t somebody please think of the bunnies?': Watership Down, rabbit horror and 'suitability' for children
Catherine Lester (University of Birmingham, UK)

14. Mourning Hazel-rah
Catherine Sadler (Independent Scholar, UK)

Guide to Further Research
Index

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The first exclusive academic study of the aesthetic, cultural and historical significance of a landmark British animated film, Watership Down.
The first substantial academic study on the animated film Watership Down

The volumes in the Animation: Key Films/Filmmakers series aim to both prompt and collect current and critical scholarship surrounding the work of selected animated films and filmmakers. Each volume focuses on the work of a specific film or filmmaker, situating the film or filmmaker within historical and critical contexts. The volumes are the first substantial study on the key films and filmmakers in question, contributing to the development of animation studies as a significant area of study in the contemporary media landscape.

Editorial Board:
Maureen Furniss (Director, Experimental Animation, CalArts, USA)

Joao Paulo Amaral Schlittler Silva (University of Sao Paulo, BRAZIL)

Sara Khalili (Tehran University of Art, IRAN)

Hannes Rall (Nanyang Technological University, SINGAPORE)

Charles DaCosta (Swinburne University of Technology, AUSTRALIA)

Lisa Bode (University of Queensland, AUSTRALIA)

Franziska Brucker (University of Vienna, AUSTRIA)

Christopher Holliday (Kings College London, UK)

Mihaela Mihailova (University of Michigan, USA)

Eve Benhamou (Université Bordeaux Montaigne, FRANCE)

Malcolm Cook (University of Southampton, UK)

Colleen Montgomery (Rowan University, USA)

Jacqueline Ristola (University of Bristol, UK)

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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781501376993
Publisert
2023-02-09
Utgiver
Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
Høyde
229 mm
Bredde
152 mm
Aldersnivå
U, 05
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
264

Redaktør

Biografisk notat

Catherine Lester is Lecturer in Film and Television at the University of Birmingham, UK. Her research centres on the intersections between the horror genre and children’s culture. She is the author of the monograph Horror Films for Children: Fear and Pleasure in American Cinema (Bloomsbury, 2021), as well as chapters and articles on Disney Princess films, animated horror and children’s horror television.