Bunny (2000) Poster

(2000)

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6/10
Sighting: Big Pink Bunnies on Street Corners of LA
AZINDN2 November 2006
OK, a man in a pink bunny costume is squatting on a street corner in Los Angeles and a woman is doing the same in another neighborhood. Is this a movement? Performance art? A statement of some sort that no one clued the public to via the internet -- or, is this the kind of displaced experience thousands of immigrant populations face trying to find work, create a new life, and survive in the dehumanized void of urban cities?

Bunny is a comedy-bittersweet drama that draws attention to the experience of one eastern European couple who leave an inhumane existence and find themselves in another. While the humorous idea of adults in pink rabbit costumes seems silly, is it any more silly than thousands of qualified professionals from other countries forced to start over at the bottom of the warren. The frustration of professional education and previous work experience worthless in their new life force adults to accept jobs of mind-numbing and questionable worth just to survive.

Bunny makes statements flatly political and ironic, but with humor that allows the audience to feel unthreatened. Slowly however, the laughs begin to fade as the situation of the film's married couple, both working bunnies, begins to alienate and ultimately degenerate their identities and marriage. With little dialog, the silence of the film forces audiences to watch the actors every nuance and facial expression, while we contemplate its larger message and resolution. What a novel idea of a silent film, but it is not really silent as allowing for silences.

Not your average indie or even typical film school exercise in Kafka, it is a film for audiences who like to be provoked to think. Bunny is not CGI and T&A mindlessness. It is an original and unexpected vision of film making by a young director which succeeds in its originality of story.
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9/10
it appeals to the tim burton in me
hitlerberries30 April 2001
chanced upon this low key film coz the other show i wanted to watch at the film festival was sold out. found BUNNY really weird. well, actually not as weird and bizarre as errol morris, but weird as in all the strange situations and motives were not explained. can anyone help me with these?

1) my chief concern is the background/purpose/objective/rationale for the company. is it a government-funded body? what exactly do the bunnies have to do? it seems like more than "offering solace to emtionally damaged to strangers". ("sales have dropped." are they running some kind of business?)

2) why are the bunnies not allowed to interact with the strangers? if their job is to pacify the strangers, won't a little consoling make things better for them? (think of the suicide guy who almost jumped after he got no response from the husband)

3) what happened to the nice (the unbitchy one) colleague, the one who was taken away together with the extra volatile stranger? (the bunny that was looking frightened while taken away in a white van)

my friend thinks that my questions are irrelevant because (he thinks) the director wasn't interested in WHY things happened this way but the fact that they just happened this way. Eg, it doesnt matter why the bunnies are doing this coz ultimately the film's focus is the state of the urbanites' emotional decay. but i thought that without understanding the background of the characters and the story, i find it difficult to understand the psyche of the couple and the bunny company, and hence, the couple's emotional upheavals and even their deterioation. (lurla petting the cat at the provision shop counter: why is the job so draining that they themselves are becoming like the strangers they comfort?)

strangely hynoptic. compelling essay on the brittleness of human emotions.
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5/10
Strange film - sad
Doomster26 February 2001
Saw this at the San Jose 2001 Cinequest film festival. A little bizarre and maybe too subtle. Petra Tikalova as Luda does a good job showing the sense of weariness of her life. But the whole "bunny" thing didn't make sense.
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