Posts Tagged ‘brer fox’
1906 Brer Rabbit Illustrations by Harry Rountree
Lately I’ve been having a hard time deciding which Brer Rabbit illustrations are my favorite. These illustrations from Harry Rountree are certainly giving Fritz Eichenberg a run for his money, mostly because of Brer Rabbit’s impressive commitment to smoking.
Look at that cigar! And those pants! Did M.C Hammer grow up on Brer Rabbit or what?
Lauren, designer of our website and fashionable friend, calls the pin/single suspender combo “a genius sartorial decision!” I agree!
This picture combines two things I love – little rabbits performing manual labor for nefarious purposes and matching red jumpsuits.
Brer Rabbit and the dark night of the soul. I really like this one’s composition.
I can’t help but laugh at this little rab crying over spilt milk, with Mrs. Rabbit rushing to the rescue.
Brer Rabbit has never looked so noble and proud as after enlisting his children to steal milk from Sis Cow, who is stuck in a tree. Hooray raping and pillaging family outings!
Brer Bear is dressed perfectly for a picnic. A+.
This last illustration is on the cover of our 1913 French copy of L’oncle Remus.
Ugh, I just don’t know — do you like these illustrations best? Or A.B. Frost’s? Or Eichenberg’s? Or Don Daily’s? Or Barry Moser’s?
Categories: Brer Rabbit, Joel Chandler Harris | Tags: Brer Bear, brer fox, Brer Rabbit, Harry Rountree, Lil Rabs,
Walt Disney’s Giant Golden Book: Uncle Remus Stories (1949)
These illustrations of the Uncle Remus Golden Book are a delight. Thank you, International Animated Film Society.
It’s a Disney book, but instead of having 3 stories like Song of the South, it’s got twelve.
Coincidentally, this particular illustration reminds me of Fantastic Mr. Fox too. Oh! And look: compare this picture from Disney to this one from Sid and Marty Krofft(!).
Categories: Brer Rabbit, Disney, Song of the South | Tags: brer fox, Brer Rabbit, Golden Books, Song of the South, Walt Disney,
Fantastic Mr. Fox — A 21st Century Brer Fox
Have you seen Fantastic Mr. Fox yet?
I did the other night, and boy was it great.
I’ll confess: I haven’t read Roald Dahl’s book. But, I couldn’t help thinking that the aesthetic and the animal realm of the movie owed plenty to illustrator A.B. Frost and the Uncle Remus tales.

In 1881 Uncle Remus changed children’s literature forever by forging a community of walking, talking critters living out their lives in a world that runs parallel to ours.
Sound familiar? (You watched the trailer, right?)
You don’t even have to read the Uncle Remus tales to see that Brer Fox (and the rest of the critters) paved the way for his fantastic descendant. Just look at how Frost depicts Brer Wolf and Brer Fox –

Their scruffy, bespoke get-ups would be right at home in Fantastic Mr. Fox, as would their serious demeanor.
It sounds crazy, but snappy-dressing, wise-cracking, vivid animal personages like this simply hadn’t happened before Uncle Remus came on the scene in 1881. Nor had anything existed like the critter community situated along Brer Rabbit’s “Big Road.”
Weird, right? It’s sort of like how chocolate chip cookies were really invented in the 1930s, but as far as my assumptions are concerned, they predate metallurgy.
All that said, director Wes Anderson has reinvented the genre with the arresting stop-motion community in Fantastic Mr. Fox.
Anderson’s movie is just as much for adults as it is for kids, mixing over-the-top shenanigans and existential questions.
For example, much of the movie revolves around the importance of Mr. Fox sticking to his day job (newspaper columnist) and repressing his urge to steal chickens. The situation allows Anderson to touch on serious questions like: “Can animals outwit their instincts?” and “Is it possible for humans to escape their nature?” Ralph Ellison, the author of Invisible Man, notes this is the perfect time for such inquiry: “Aesop and Uncle Remus had taught us that comedy is a disguised form of philosophical instruction.”
At one point, when Mr. Fox kills a chicken in one bite, his trusty sidekick Kylie notes just how violent and bloody the incident was.
The same violence and bestial instinct demonstrated in the movie is ever-present in the Brer Rabbit stories, like in “The Awful Fate of Mr. Wolf,” where Brer Rabbit locks Brer Wolf in a trunk.

As his little rabbits look on with glee, Brer Rabbit bores holes in the trunk so he can pour boiling water inside.
So maybe rabbits don’t instinctually boil their enemies alive in locked trunks. But Brer Rabbit does do what it takes to protect and feed his family, only with a little diabolical finesse.
The parallels between Fantastic Mr. Fox and the Uncle Remus tales go on and on. While most critics have been blowin’ up my Google Alerts with comparisons of Uncle Remus and Princess Tiana (as in, they’re both African-American characters in a Disney movie), they’re missing the much more substantial connections in Wes Anderson’s latest.
I’ll stop here, but I have included a few more of Frost’s illustrations, below. If you see the movie, let me know what you think!





Categories: brer fox, Brer Rabbit, Uncle Remus | Tags: brer fox, Brer Rabbit, fantastic mr. fox, Joel Chandler Harris, Uncle Remus, wes anderson,










