Jessica Rabbit gets reimagined in different anime styles with original Who Framed Roger Rabbit art. Who Framed Roger Rabbit is a 1988 Robert Zemeckis film about a cartoon rabbit who gets accused of murder, and then enlists the help of a private investigator to help prove his innocence. Who Framed Roger Rabbit featured a leading cast including Bob Hoskins, Christopher Lloyd, Joanna Cassidy, Charles Fleischer, Stubby Kaye, Alan Tilvern, and Richard LeParmentier. The film won three Oscars, including Best Film Editing, Best Sound Effects Editing, and Best Visual Effects.
Art from @nickocreates.ai shows Jessica Rabbit in multiple different styles. She is created in nine different anime styles including Dragonball Super, Naruto, Bleach, One Piece, My Hero Academia, Attack on Titan, Cowboy Bebop, Jojo's Bizarre Adventure, and Demon Slayer. The caption for explains why they chose to make AI art for Jessica Rabbit, writing "On my last poll, the winning answer was Mikasa from Attack on Titan, but I wasn’t really happy with the results so went with Jessica Rabbit since she was a runner up in a different poll." The tools used include Midjourney, Procreate, Photoshop, and Lightroom.
What The Jessica Rabbit Art Changes About The Character
The Different s Bring Out Different Features
Jessica Rabbit is animated to begin with in the original Who Framed Roger Rabbit, which is a live-action and animated hybrid. The character is the human wife of Roger Rabbit, and is a highly sexualized figure within the movie as a whole. The character's original style included hand-drawn, 2D animation, but different than an anime style.
Though the film is goofy at first glance, Who Framed Roger Rabbit was incredibly influential in mixing animation and live-action content.
The art from @nickocreates.ai offers a very different take on the character. Even within the anime stylings themselves, the way in which Jessica Rabbit appears has starkly disparate manifestations. The vast majority of the images play up the character's breasts, most notably in the Bleach imagining. The character's outfit is slightly more contained in something like Cowboy Bepop, whereas other features such as the size of her eyes and nose have a lot of variation.
This Art Is A Reminder Of How Notable Who Framed Roger Rabbit Was
The Film Has Huge Stylistic Importance
Looking at these Who Framed Roger Rabbit images, I cannot help but reflect on how important the film was to cinema. Though the film is goofy at first glance, Who Framed Roger Rabbit was incredibly influential in mixing animation and live-action content. Now, we see that done all the time with CG and live-action mixed like this year's If, but it was novel in 1988. Jessica Rabbit's femme fatale is one key character in that Who Framed Roger Rabbit style, so it is fascinating to see her in a new light.
Source: @nickocreates.ai/Instagram

Who Framed Roger Rabbit
- Release Date
- June 22, 1988
- Runtime
- 104 minutes
- Director
- Robert Zemeckis
Cast
- Amy Irving
Who Framed Roger Rabbit combines live-action and animation to create a world where humans and cartoon characters coexist. Set in 1940s Hollywood, the film follows a private investigator who is contracted to work on the case of a cartoon framed for murder, despite his dislike of cartoons. Bob Hoskins, Charles Fleischer, Christopher Lloyd, and Kathleen Turner all star.
- Writers
- Peter S. Seaman, Jeffrey Price
- Studio(s)
- Warner Bros. Pictures
- Distributor(s)
- Warner Bros. Pictures
- Budget
- $70 million
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