
It was adapted seven years later as "Who Framed Roger Rabbit," which starred Bob Hoskins, who would later go on to play Mario Mario in the greatest movie ever made. But the book is extremely different from the movie Disney made.
The first part of the book has the character of Roger Rabbit, a reclusive funny papers character hiding in solitude, asking a Private Investigator (Eddie Valiant) to find the men who want to kill him. He (the Rabbit) is soon gunned down and murdered, and his last words are in a speech bubble above his head, but they've been redacted, or "censored."
It's up to Valiant to find out who censored Roger Rabbit in a story of murder and sex. Not exactly Disney material-- the movie's first draft was titled "Who Shot Roger Rabbit?" But as things progressed, they changed the funny papers characters to actual animated cartoons and removed the idea of whenever a Toon speaks a word bubble appears above their head with the text of their speech in it. The book is extremely gritty and dark, bleak and depressing as opposed to the cheery nature of the movie that's based upon it.
Personally, I think this book has a lot of artistic merit and would work well as a crime drama along the lines of "The Sopranos" or "Dexter." Something they'd show late at night on HBO. Has anyone read this forgotten masterpiece?

