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Bunny and the Bull

  • 2009
  • Unrated
  • 1h 41m
IMDb RATING
6.6/10
5.3K
YOUR RATING
Bunny and the Bull (2009)
A young shut-in takes an imaginary road trip inside his apartment, based on mementos and memories of a European trek from years before.
Play trailer2:11
4 Videos
71 Photos
ComedyDrama

A young shut-in takes an imaginary road trip inside his apartment, based on mementos and memories of a European trek from years before.A young shut-in takes an imaginary road trip inside his apartment, based on mementos and memories of a European trek from years before.A young shut-in takes an imaginary road trip inside his apartment, based on mementos and memories of a European trek from years before.

  • Director
    • Paul King
  • Writer
    • Paul King
  • Stars
    • Edward Hogg
    • Simon Farnaby
    • Verónica Echegui
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.6/10
    5.3K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Paul King
    • Writer
      • Paul King
    • Stars
      • Edward Hogg
      • Simon Farnaby
      • Verónica Echegui
    • 31User reviews
    • 36Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win & 2 nominations total

    Videos4

    Bunny and the Bull
    Trailer 2:11
    Bunny and the Bull
    "Road Trip" from Bunny and the Bull
    Clip 4:03
    "Road Trip" from Bunny and the Bull
    "Road Trip" from Bunny and the Bull
    Clip 4:03
    "Road Trip" from Bunny and the Bull
    "Horse Race" from Bunny and the Bull
    Clip 1:46
    "Horse Race" from Bunny and the Bull
    "Milk" from Bunny and the Bull
    Clip 2:02
    "Milk" from Bunny and the Bull

    Photos71

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    + 65
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    Top cast15

    Edit
    Edward Hogg
    Edward Hogg
    • Stephen
    Simon Farnaby
    Simon Farnaby
    • Bunny
    Verónica Echegui
    Verónica Echegui
    • Eloisa
    Richard Ayoade
    Richard Ayoade
    • Museum Curator
    Julian Barratt
    Julian Barratt
    • Atilla
    Noel Fielding
    Noel Fielding
    • Javier
    Sylvia Syms
    Sylvia Syms
    • Hotelier
    James Fox
    James Fox
    • Narrator
    Rich Fulcher
    Rich Fulcher
    • Captain Crab
    • (voice)
    Gus Brown
    • Horse Race Commentator
    Madeleine Worrall
    • Melanie
    Stephen Foster-Hunt
    • Fairground Worker
    • (uncredited)
    Waleed Khalid
    Waleed Khalid
    • Ray
    • (uncredited)
    George Newton
    George Newton
    • Polish Restaurant Manager
    • (uncredited)
    Margaret Wheldon
    • Tourist
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Paul King
    • Writer
      • Paul King
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews31

    6.65.2K
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    Featured reviews

    6tomgillespie2002

    Beautifully crafted film with laugh-out-loud moments

    This 'surreal' comedy plays much like an extended episode of The Mighty Boosh, however, it is far more endearing than this. The story focuses on friends Stephen (Edward Hogg) and Bunny (Simon Farnaby). Stephen is a shut-in who hoards everyday items and mementos in boxes stacked around the house. The two characters go on an imaginary road trip, which is fantasised through memories of past events. This faux-adventure takes them to Spain, where Bunny learns how to be a matador. This is after they meet Spanish seafood restaurant waitress Eloisa (Veronica Echegui), who has quit her job and decided to make the journey back to Spain. After acquiring a vehicle in a crab eating contest, Stephen and Bunny catch up with Eloisa and make that journey happen.

    The connection between this and the BBC show The Mighty Boosh, is obvious, as the films writer/director Paul King is involved in directing the shows episodes. The inclusion of Noel Fielding and Julien Barract in small (but highly hilarious) parts heightens this further.

    The visual style of the film is reminiscent of the work of Jean-Pierre Jeunet and Michel Gondry. King uses the fantasy elements of the journey to create a backdrop of animations made from cardboard and layered paper. In an opening sequence we she Stephen and Bunny making bets in a bookies that looks like a set lifted from an episode of Paddington from the 1970s: that is, two dimensional pencil sketched surroundings.

    There is much to like here, the performances of the two main characters are excellent, especially Simon Farnaby, who dresses like a 1970s binman. But for me the stand out character, and giver of the best laughs is Julien Barrats Polish Tramp. In a scene under a motorway flyover, Atilla offers Stephen some milk. "It's dog milk". This is offered in a bottle, but Atilla drinks directly from the dogs teet. Stephen gets a hard-on from the dog, Atilla replies "You want f**k my wife?"

    In the closing sequences we get a beautiful Jeunetesque payoff, beauty becomes rhythm. Without words, the visuals play. The mechanical bull becomes the person. Metal to skin, skin to muscle, but death is ultimate when fantasy is mistaken for reality. Well, that's what I wrote in my notes. I'd had a few drinks whilst I watched it. In conclusion, a beautifully crafted film visually, with many laugh-out-loud moments, and some endearing characters.

    www.the-wrath-of-blog.blogspot.com
    8sr-dean

    Marmite on film.

    This film is definitely not for everyone, a real love it or hate it. It is a little surreal but at its heart, its a nice little story of friendship.In short, an agoraphobic man tries to work up the courage to leave his house. Much of the film is his memories of a road trip he took with his best friend. I guess bunny and the bull can be categorised as a comedy, but the humour is mild and a little dark. For me the unique element to this film is the quirky cinematography separating memories from reality. The final five minuets of this film are well worth waiting for. This movie is without doubt a one off and very British. There is no guarantee you will enjoy this film......but watch it anyway! (Its only 100 mins of your life)
    10rooprect

    Tremendous on so many levels

    "Bunny and the Bull" is possibly the most visually inventive film I've seen in my life. It begins with a title credit sequence with the camera gracefully flowing from object to object in a small room, like in Jeunet-Caro's classic "Delicatessen". It stays in that same Delicatessenesque vein while we meet our hero, an agoraphobe who evidently hasn't left his apartment in 1 year, and then the real fun starts...

    Our hero "Stephen" (Edward Hogg) stares at random objects in his meticulously cluttered apartment, and each object triggers a flashback. Each flashback is vividly adorned in scenery relating to the object that triggered it. For example, his first flashback comes from a box of fast food takeout. The flashback scene contains the actors and some real props but they are sitting inside an animated cardboard box. Occasionally cars will pass by the window outside, similarly animated cardboard cutouts.

    I found this visual style to be both eye-catching and wonderfully creative. Animation is very old school, using tricks of stop motion photography, hand drawings, confetti for snow, and projection screens showing dreamlike landscapes behind the action. It reminded me of the work of Michel Gondry ("The Science of Sleep", "Eternal sunshine of the Spotless Mind") or Tim Burton's old school stuff ("Nightmare Before Christmas", "Edward Scissorhands", "Peewee's Big Adventure") but ramped up on steroids. Everything is very vivid and pleasing to the eye with cartoonish colors and simplicity surrounding what ultimately ends up being a very complex story.

    The actors present a fabulous dynamic with "Stephen" being the obsessively uptight dweeb who courts a girl for 3 years before working up the nerve to say he likes her, while his best friend "Bunny" (Simon Farnaby) is the antithesis: a devil-may-care hedonist who can bed any girl in under 2 minutes it seems. The movie is a series of flashbacks unraveling a strange adventure that the two of them had together, mostly silly escapades culminating in a life-altering event that just might alter your life as well.

    Something I found particularly funny was the way our hero is an animal lover, and a very outspoken one at that. He has a hilarious way of turning almost any situation awkward by expressing his views, almost like a "Debbie Downer" character. But if you're an animal lover you may find yourself cheering him on. For example, in one scene they are talking to a would-be matador who is relating the joy and elegance of bullfighting. He says something like "It is not a fight. It is a dance. A beautiful dance as only man and beast can do." And our hero Stephen fires back "Really? I thought it was all about stabbing a defenceless animal in the back of the neck until he dies." And the matador says, "It is a peculiar dance, I'll give you that." Great sarcastic & deadpan humor along with hilariously awkward situations pepper this film throughout, making it fun from beginning to end. And as I alluded earlier, there is ultimately some great depth and power to this seemingly whimsical flick.

    If you're a fan of the directors I mentioned above, Jean-Pierre Jeunet, Michel Gondry & Tim Burton... and I'll throw in Charlie Kaufman & Spike Jonze ("Being John Malkovich", "Synecdoche NY") and maybe Terry Gilliam ("Fear & Loathing in Las Vegas") then do not hesitate to see this wonderfully bizarre flick. In over 500 films, I've only given out about 20 perfect "10" ratings, but this film truly deserves the honor.
    7come2whereimfrom

    A visual feast of a debut.

    Firstly this isn't a Mighty Boosh film and secondly this isn't a comedy, yes it has some funny moments, but it's more of a drama. Quirkily telling the story of a road trip across Europe by friends Bunny and Stephen the action is told through a series of lo-fi set pieces which is a heady blend of Gilliam, Gondry and even Oliver Postgate. There is a real sense of a hands on glue and scissors approach. This comes across in the film as the attention to detail in the sets often threatens to overshadow the actors but it's the central friendship which is at the core of the film that keeps the fantasy in check. Grounded in a reality that most people should be able to recognise the story is at times a heartbreaking flashback to misspent youth and the bonds, no matter how strange, we form as humans. It's an age old story of boy meets girl, girl meets boy's best friend etc but the way the story unfolds with the aid of the animation gives it a fresh lease of life, its surreal and weird but at the same time charming and real. A series of cameos from three fifths of the Boosh are a little light relief in what turns out to be quite a dark tale but it's really Simon Farnaby as the lovable rogue Bunny that shines above all else. Clearly 'Withnail & I' had a big influence on the director if not the film and you will spot similarities, which isn't a bad thing, Whitnail is a classic. Whether this resonates as much with today's youth as that film did we will have to see but all in all director Paul King's leap from small to big screen is a success. It's clever, funny and dark and the start of a big screen career that will be well worth following.
    7masonsaul

    Endlessly whimsical

    Bunny and the Bull is a really good debut for writer & director Paul King whilst offering early proof of how rewarding his collaborations with Simon Farnaby can be. It's a debut in every sense of the word because the collision of ideas here don't entirely coalesce but the sheer inventiveness of what it's doing never runs out and also powers through most of the flaws. The style outweighs the substance and it's funny and stylish enough to compensate.

    Edward Hogg brings a believability to his character's awkwardness which makes him a likeable protagonist and naturally enhances the situational comedy. Simon Farnaby is a lot more confident and self obsessed so he pairs well with Hogg. There's undoubtedly some fun to be had seeing someone who's synonymous with the kid friendly Horrible Histories be truly let off the leash in a much more adult film that gives him the opportunity to swear, be raunchy and even bare all.

    Paul King's direction has an endless supply of whimsy working with the low budget. Every new location is a delight as they come up with really fun ways to showcase different countries without ever leaving the UK, utilising everyday items in the best ways. Even though the content is more adult, it's still clear this is the creative team who'd go on to make Paddington, especially in the ending that really goes for the emotion and acts as a noble first attempt of something they'd only get better at.

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    Related interests

    Will Ferrell in Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy (2004)
    Comedy
    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The cardboard backgrounds are a reference to the "Paddington Bear" (1976) animations. Director Paul King later directed the live action adaptation of Paddington (2014).
    • Goofs
      Ripon racetrack is a flat course, not hurdles as depicted in the film.
    • Quotes

      Javier: Much has been written about the art of bullfighting, but I can sum it up in one sentence: get out of the way of the bull, you idiot! Otherwise he will rip open your anus like it was a cheap velcro wallet.

    • Connections
      Featured in Live from Studio Five: Episode #1.57 (2009)
    • Soundtracks
      Attics
      Composed by Olly Ralfe (as Oliver Ralfe) and Andrew Mitchell

      Performed by Ralfe Band

      Published by Domino Publishing Co. LTD. (PRS)

      P+C Loose Music under exclusive license from Ralfe Band

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    FAQ19

    • How long is Bunny and the Bull?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • August 13, 2010 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Official site
      • Official site
    • Languages
      • English
      • Spanish
    • Also known as
      • 史蒂芬的奇幻旅程
    • Filming locations
      • Nottingham, Nottinghamshire, England, UK
    • Production companies
      • Warp X
      • Screen Yorkshire
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Gross worldwide
      • $81,010
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 41m(101 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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