rdfs:comment
| - After his companion Tenner starts receiving doom-laden visions of their warren being buried by stale cakes, Poison Ivy decides to rally his friends and leave their home before it is too late. However, because they all suffer a serious genetic complaint, they do not make it far before they hilariously all start rolling around, dribbling and making guttural noises. Several more slapstick situations occur, mainly centred around Blackberry's inability to stop hitting himself, before the fun is curtailed by the appearance of a large, hungry fox.
- Watership Down is a novel by Richard Adams, detailing the journey of a band of rabbits from their home to find a new warren. All of the main characters are rabbits, and all the rabbits act very much like real rabbits, based on Adams's reading of The Private Life of the Rabbit by naturalist Ronald Lockley. It is, perhaps, notoriously famous for its depictions of violence, especially in the movie adaptation, whose Disney-like animation style fooled parents into thinking it would be innocent enough to let young children view.
- Watership Down is an upgraded shipyard shoppe on Olive Island on the Cerulean Ocean. It was named after the book Watership Down by Richard Adams. Image:Icon boarding house.pngArr! This article about a building in Puzzle Pirates be a stub. Ye can help YPPedia by [ expanding it].
- Watership Down tells the story of a group of rabbits who leave their warren after a "seer" among them foresees an impending doom coming down upon their home. They leave against the judgement of their Chief Rabbit, who dismissed the vision as folly, abandoned their home, and set off on their own for a better life. They have many near-fatal experiences as the travel across the English countryside and come upon a new home where they feel safe: Watership Down. They believe it was destined for them, but soon realize that getting there is only half the battle. The book has created its own mythology and language for rabbits, and is one of the greatest novels of the modern world. Wikipedia
- The story takes place around Hampshire, England, and the rabbits in the story are shown to have their own type of language and culture Watership Down was Adam's first published novel, it was rejected about thirteen times before a publisher finally accepted it. The novel has been adapted into a 1978 animated film, a theatrical production and a TV series.
- Fiver has a dream that something terrible will happen to the warren, and he convinces Hazel that they must go visit the Chief Rabbit. Hazel convinces a member of the Owsla (the strongest rabbits in a warren who surround the Chief Rabbit) named Bigwig to let them see the Chief Rabbit. Hazel tells him that Fiver is his brother, and Fiver tells the Chief Rabbit, called the Threarah (-rah is added to the name of a leader), of his premonition. However, Threarah ignores the warning and later scolds Bigwig for allowing them to interrupt his sleep. Hazel, Fiver, and two of their friends, Dandelion and Blackberry, are discussing the conversation with the Chief Rabbit when Bigwig comes up to the group. He informs them that he has left the Owsla and wants to leave the warren with them. Hazel says tha
- Watership Down is a novel by Richard Adams and was published in 1972. It is often seen as a social commentary done using a group of rabbits as the main characters, and chronicling their search for a new place to live after they narrowly escape the poisoning and excavation of their warren by men. In the course of their search for a new warren, they encounter a supposed utopia, where the rabbits are nurtured and fed into apathy by the local farmer. However the newcomers come to realize that this strange warren is a trap, as the farmer has set snares all around the area.
- Watership Down is a heroic fantasy/political novel about a small group of rabbits, written by English author Richard Adams. Although the animals in the story live in their natural environment, they are anthropomorphised, possessing their own culture, language (Lapine), proverbs, poetry, and mythology. Evoking epic themes, the novel recounts the rabbits' odyssey as they escape the destruction of their warren to seek a place in which to establish a new home, encountering perils and temptations along the way.
- Watership Down opens with a narrated prologue establishing the Lapine culture and mythology, describing the creation of the world and its animals by the sun god "Lord Frith," including the rabbits' leader, Prince "El-ahrairah." All the animals are friendly, and eat grass, but the rabbits soon multiply and overwhelm the other animals. When Frith warns El-ahrairah to control his people, the prince scoffs at his warning; in retaliation, Frith gives each animal a gift, turning them into predators that hunt down and kill the rabbits. However, Frith also gifts the rabbits, with speed and cunning; all creatures may seek to kill El-ahriarah and his descendants, but the rabbits may survive by their wits and their quickness. The film then switches from a stylized narrative to realistic animation, se
- Watership Down is a 1978 British animated adventure drama film written, produced and directed by Martin Rosen and based on the book of the same name by Richard Adams. It was financed by a consortium of British financial institutions. Originally released on 19 October 1978, the film was an immediate success and it became the sixth most popular film of 1979 at the British box office. It was the first animated feature film to be presented in Dolby surround sound.
|