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Even in this day
and age, there’s a certain charm to Rankin Bass and their stop motion
creations. “The Easter Bunny…” has a great visual sense with character
designs and pastels that are aesthetically pleasing and rather appealing
to the eyes, and they’re always nothing short of superb when providing
special effects, even considering the time these movies were made.
So I sat here trying to think of reasons why I liked “The Easter Bunny…”
and then after about three hours of sitting still and looking into a
wall, I realized that I was being a little too easy on Rankin Bass. I
mean, they gave me hours of fun as a child, they gave me many nice
Holiday memories, and yes, I love a lot of their Christmas films like
“Santa Claus is coming to Town,” and “The Little Drummer Boy.” But, I’ll
tell you what, I just didn’t like “The Easter Bunny is Coming to Town.”
Granted, for all the entertainment value it has in the way of cute
characters, and bright landscapes, it’s essentially a very formulaic
retread. It’s one thing to strike on the device that you built on one
movie, but to do it again is just pushing it sometimes.
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“The Easter Bunny is Coming to
Town” relies on the very same story themes as “Santa Claus…”
relied on. There’s our kindly post man, his trusty vehicle,
his letters from children, and the odd moment of their
questions that we—apparently—have been wondering about.
Perhaps I’m a bit too cynical, but I don’t care why we color
eggs, I don’t care why Lillies are Easter flowers, and come
on, we get new clothes on Easter because people go to church
on Easter. But, I approached this movie with a stern
optimism and I just didn’t like it. |
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I didn’t care for Sunny the Easter Bunny
who was once an abandoned rabbit discovered by children in Kidville and
became a hero who delivered eggs and candy to people all over the world.
The problem with Sunny is that he’s not as interesting as Santa Claus.
So, we’re instead
forced to sympathize for him, when really he has nothing that’s
remarkable about his origin, regardless of how hard they try to paint
him with depth. And his insistence on telling children to stand up for
themselves feels often very out of place with the general story themes.
On the same spectrum, there’s a constant struggle here in whether it
wants to be a secular tale or a religious tale. So instead there are
themes here and there connecting to religion, along with uses of the
word “Lord” thrown about, but it stays mired in the same superficial
story about the creation of jelly beans and Easter Eggs. For Rankin
Bass, this just isn’t the best they’ve put out for kids.
In spite of the always pleasing animation and colorful set pieces, "The
Easter Bunny is Coming to Town" is not the best in the Rankin Bass stop
motion gallery with a story purely a retread of former outputs, and a
boring lead character. The DVD is great, but you'd be hard pressed to
enjoy it, all the same.
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