IMDb RATING
7.2/10
1.9K
YOUR RATING
Baby Herman swallows his rattle, and Roger has to take him to the hospital to get it out.Baby Herman swallows his rattle, and Roger has to take him to the hospital to get it out.Baby Herman swallows his rattle, and Roger has to take him to the hospital to get it out.
April Winchell
- Young Baby Herman
- (voice)
- …
Lou Hirsch
- Adult Baby Herman
- (voice)
Corey Burton
- Orderly
- (voice)
Richard Williams
- Droopy Dog
- (voice)
Bob Hoskins
- Eddie Valiant
- (uncredited)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaWhen Roger bursts into the hospital room to grieve for Baby Herman, Mickey Mouse appears as a mouse skull anatomical wall chart. Mickey's pants and shoes can be seen next to the changing screen, and a bag of money sits on the weighing scale, indicating that Mickey himself once occupied the room. Later, the mouse skull chart is replaced by a chart showing a rabbit's brain, which is a peanut.
- GoofsWhen Baby Herman first swallows the rattle, Roger panics and screams for somebody to call 9-1-1. However, in the end when it reverts to the "real world", the setting is the same 1940s setting as "Who Framed Roger Rabbit?" - 9-1-1 wasn't even proposed as an emergency number in the United States until 1968.
- Quotes
[a scrub grabs Roger's tail]
Roger Rabbit: Hey! Let go of the cotton, ya swab!
[squeezes the guy's nose - HONK HONK]
- Crazy creditsToon Wrangler: Steve Starkey
- ConnectionsEdited into The Best of Roger Rabbit (1996)
Featured review
Having recently got one of my all-time favourite films 'Who Framed Roger Rabbit' on DVD, all three Roger Rabbit shorts were included as bonuses. And what great bonuses they were, thoroughly enjoyable in their own way, go perfectly with the film and almost as good.
The first Roger Rabbit short 'Tummy Trouble' does a very good job cooking up material that's funny and imaginative in a setting as ordinary as a hospital, whereas the other two cartoons had more expansive settings that allowed the humour to run wild even more. The basic story is not that special, if you remember the hilarious made-up short that started 'Who Framed Roger Rabbit' you have the basic story structure for all three Roger Rabbit cartoons except in different settings.
What stops things from being predictable, repetitive and tired is the increasingly intensely frenetic physical comedy/violence (Roger always getting the worst of it), the wonderfully relentlessly madcap pacing that reminds one of a slightly faster paced Tex Avery cartoon (while occasionally feeling a touch rushed) and writing that's never less than very amusing and at its best hysterical (like with the crashing through the floors, in the operating theatre and the elevator).
Anybody familiar with 'Animaniacs', 'Pinky and the Brain' and 'Tiny Toons', or who grew up with them, and only saw the Roger Rabbit cartoons recently like me, will love the vibrancy of the colours, the detail of the backgrounds and fluidity of the movements in 'Tummy Trouble'. The live-action sequence at the end like in tribute to 'Who Framed Roger Rabbit' was an inspired touch. The music is rousing and energetically orchestrated, Roger and Baby Herman work wonders together and the voice acting is fine.
Overall, great first Roger Rabbit cartoon. 9/10 Bethany Cox
The first Roger Rabbit short 'Tummy Trouble' does a very good job cooking up material that's funny and imaginative in a setting as ordinary as a hospital, whereas the other two cartoons had more expansive settings that allowed the humour to run wild even more. The basic story is not that special, if you remember the hilarious made-up short that started 'Who Framed Roger Rabbit' you have the basic story structure for all three Roger Rabbit cartoons except in different settings.
What stops things from being predictable, repetitive and tired is the increasingly intensely frenetic physical comedy/violence (Roger always getting the worst of it), the wonderfully relentlessly madcap pacing that reminds one of a slightly faster paced Tex Avery cartoon (while occasionally feeling a touch rushed) and writing that's never less than very amusing and at its best hysterical (like with the crashing through the floors, in the operating theatre and the elevator).
Anybody familiar with 'Animaniacs', 'Pinky and the Brain' and 'Tiny Toons', or who grew up with them, and only saw the Roger Rabbit cartoons recently like me, will love the vibrancy of the colours, the detail of the backgrounds and fluidity of the movements in 'Tummy Trouble'. The live-action sequence at the end like in tribute to 'Who Framed Roger Rabbit' was an inspired touch. The music is rousing and energetically orchestrated, Roger and Baby Herman work wonders together and the voice acting is fine.
Overall, great first Roger Rabbit cartoon. 9/10 Bethany Cox
- TheLittleSongbird
- Feb 27, 2017
- Permalink
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official site
- Language
- Also known as
- Roger Rabbit: Tummy Trouble
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime8 minutes
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.85 : 1
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