WHITE RABBIT


The White Rabbit, as seen in Lewis Carroll's book "Alice in Wonderland

The 'White Rabbit' is a fictional character in Lewis Carroll's book Alice in Wonderland. He appears at the very beginning of the book, in chapter one, wearing a waistcoat, and muttering "Oh dear! Oh dear! I shall be too late!" Alice follows him down the rabbit hole into Wonderland. The Rabbit shows up again in the last two chapters, as a herald-like servant of the King and Queen of Hearts.

Contents
In popular culture
Role Playing Games
Computer & video games
Television & Films
Literature
Music
Disney
External links

In popular culture


Role Playing Games


★ The White Rabbit appears in the TSR AD&D modules EX1-2. Dungeonland and The Land Beyond the Magic Mirror. TSR (Tactical Studies Research) is now owned by Wizards of the Coast, and the company has made both modules available as a free download (see links below).
Computer & video games


★ A similar rabbit, MIPS, appears in the Nintendo 64 game ''Super Mario 64'', exclaiming that it is late for an appointment.

★ In American McGee's Alice, the White Rabbit is responsible for Alice's return to Wonderland. He is first seen as Alice's soft toy, then becomes something that looks vaguely like the John Tenniel illustration, only more shriveled and corpse-like. When Alice is chasing him in the Village of the Doomed, he shrinks and goes down a hole. Alice follows him by shrinking herself with a hand-made potion. They re-meet in the Wonderland Woods, where he tells her to find Caterpillar. Later, he is killed by the Mad Hatter after being squashed under his foot. Like all the murdered characters in the game, the rabbit is restored at the end, when Alice regains her sanity.

★ In the Playstation 2 action-RPG game, ''Kingdom Hearts'', and its Game Boy Advance follow-up, ''. His role was essentially the same in both games; worried about being late, he led Sora, Donald Duck and Goofy to the Queen's palace. His Japanese voice actor was Shigeru Ushiyama.

★ Rockstar's game Manhunt (game) features a level called "Kill the Rabbit." In this stage, you hunt down a man wearing a white rabbit suit. Upon entering the level, Starkweather says to you "time for some Wonderland fun," an obvious allusion to Lewis Carroll's work. At one point, the man in the rabbit suit tells you that Starkweather is done filming you, and commences to command an army of Smileys to dispose of you. You must then kill the man in the rabbit suit and take his key.

★ In the MMORPG expansion '', following a white rabbit in Drakkar Lake leads the player down to a circular valley, where he is then ambushed by an unusually large number of enemies and a boss.
Television & Films


★ Neo is told to follow the "White Rabbit" in ''The Matrix'' in one of many metaphysical "waking up" metaphors. Seconds later his doorbell rings, and when he opens the door he finds a woman with a tattoo of a white rabbit on her shoulder.

★ The fifth episode of the TV series ''Lost'' was titled "White Rabbit." In it Locke refers to the 'ghost' Jack is chasing after as a white rabbit. He suggests that impossible things might be possible on the island, making it a Wonderland of sorts.

★ In the film Donnie Darko, Frank is a boy masked as a white rabbit who guides Donnie in his project like a sort of imaginary friend.
Literature


★ In the graphic novel ''The Dark Knight Returns'', Bruce Wayne recalls chasing a white rabbit as a child and falling down a rabbit hole before his first encounter with bats.

★ In The Looking-Glass Wars, the White Rabbit is re-imagined as Bibwit Harte, an albino tutor with super-sensitive hearing.

★ In Rainbows End The character of Rabbit might be a reference to The White Rabbit in the Matrix film.
Music


Jefferson Airplane recorded a song called "White Rabbit", with references to this character and the Wonderland saga in general.

★ He appeared in the band The Used music video for their song "All that I've Got".
Disney

In the Disney version of the book, the Rabbit seems to have the most logic out of all the Wonderland characters. Thus, he is often the straight man for their zany antics; when he asks the Dodo for help on getting the "monster" (Alice) out of his house, Dodo's ultimate solution is to burn the house down. At the Mad Tea Party, the Mad Hatter and the March Hare try to "fix" his watch, proclaiming it to be "two days slow". Through various food they put in the watch (butter, tea, jam, and lemon), the two cause it to go berserk, and the Hare smashes it with his mallet. dsfhputoThe Rabbit was perhaps most famous for the little ditty he sang at the beginning-"I'm late! I'm late! For a very important date! No time to say hello, goodbye! I'm late, I'm late, I'm late!". The Rabbit was voiced by Bill Thompson. In psychological terms this suggests an Anxious personality disorder.
Some believe the rabbit was late for the announcement of the Queen to the royal garden. The panic the rabbit showed was his fear of losing his head. Upon her arrival (where Alice has been painting the roses red) the cards finish their song and the rabbit blows his trumpet (which he had been carrying for most of his lines) royally introducing the king and queen.
The Disney Rabbit made a few appearances on the Disney Channel original show, ''House of Mouse''. His most noticeable appearance was when he confessed to Clarabelle Cow that "I'm not really late, and I don't really have a date. I'm a fraud!". He was voiced by Corey Burton, who would voice the Rabbit in all future speaking roles.

External links



White Rabbit character description

TSR Modules EX1-2, Dungeonland and The Land Beyond the Magic Mirror - article on the modules and download links

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