Controversial Character RETURNS to Disney's Bizarre Dark Ride

Comments for Controversial Character RETURNS to Disney’s Bizarre Dark Ride

Roger Rabbit's Car Toon Spin entrance

Credit: Disney

10 Comments

  1. J

    “One ride in particular that can only be found at Disneyland in California is Roger Rabbit’s Car Toon Spin.”

    There is a version of it at Tokyo Disneyland too.

  2. Joseph Logan

    Jessica Rabbit looks like Duck Tracy’s sister with the yellow coat a hat. Don’t like it at all.

  3. Rachel

    Lame. You can barely even tell it’s her. Also I think it sends the wrong message that an attractive woman has to be covered up from head to toe in order to be “appropriate”.

    1. Ken

      As opposed to tied up in a trunk

  4. Kristina

    Disney has always owned Touchstone, meaning Roger Rabbit IS a Disney movie and always has been.

  5. VDog

    Ugh, cmon Disney, I’m all for correcting blatant errors from your past, but OVERDOING it by completely covering her up to where you can’t even see her Face is just providing ammo for the “anti-woke” crowd. You could’ve done this much more tastefully. She’s so covered up she looks tacky at the other end of the spectrum. And soooo obvious. Even a real woman wearing a trench coat would have a much better silhouette.

  6. Jen

    I’m sorry how is Jessica the “controversial” character? If anything it’s Baby Herman. Jessica whole stick was you weren’t ment to judge her on her looks. She was strong and able to take care of herself. Nothing controversial about it. I really wish we’d stop telling our fellow girls to cover up.

    1. M

      Exactly

  7. M

    And what exactly was so “controversial” about Jessica Rabbit? The word Controversy has been tossed around so much it’s lost all meaning these days. There’s nothing broken about Jessica Rabbit that need to be fixed. Real fans will remember she’s not bad she was just drawn that way

  8. Max Johnson

    Does anybody else remember what it was like when female empowerment meant women being proud of their bodies, instead of trying to “Defeat the Male Gaze”? Somehow, in the 2020s, “Progressivism” has managed to resurrect Puritan ideas of how women should dress that died out in the 1920s.

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