In a barren period for animated features, producer Martin Rosen saw the
opportunity to translate the success of Richard Adams' bestselling fantasy to
the big screen. After original director John Hubley was fired for favouring
experimentation over productivity, Rosen took over the directorial reins
himself, guiding a team of young British animators afforded relative creative
autonomy thanks to unique funding from commercial banks.
In keeping with Adams' often harsh vision, the rabbits are notably less
anthropomorphised than most animated animals, with Rosen's team taking a
naturalistic approach to their physical attributes and wilder instincts.
However, these furry creatures are still a cultured group, and the film
faithfully sets out the rabbits' own folklore, religion, poetry and their
own language, Lapine.
Despite some very violent scenes, the film was awarded a 'U' certificate,
while the oft-repeated contention that it is too dark for children, not least
with its religious and political subtext, has led to comparisons with pioneering
British animation Animal Farm (d. John Halas & Joy Batchelor, 1954). Whereas
Orwell's famous four-legged fable was an attack on Stalinism, Watership Down can
be read as a political allegory attacking fascism and appeasement. Nevertheless,
editor Terry Rawlings manages to maintain the energy of what remains a vivid
adventure narrative when it could have been mired in subtext.
The film embraces the natural, rendering the rich hues of the English
countryside onto canvas, while the sound effects were sourced from the actual
locations in Hampshire that inspired Adams' original tale. Despite a pastoral
score from Angela Morley and Malcolm Williamson, the film's soundtrack was
popularised by the song 'Bright Eyes', composed by Mike Batt and sung by Art
Garfunkel. With a video using scenes from the film, 'Bright Eyes' scored a UK
number one some six months after Watership Down's release and secured the film's
place in British popular culture.
Attracting the cream of British voice talent, led by John Hurt and Richard
Briers, Watership Down is an admirable example of an uncompromising British
animation that initially struggled to find distribution before box office
returns confounded expectations. Rosen's attempt to repeat the formula with
another Adams novel, The Plague Dogs (US, 1982), was less successful,
however, as was a return to Watership Down some 20 years later for a children's
series (ITV, 1999), which suffered from the dilution of adult themes for a
younger audience.
Stephen Collings
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