This articleneeds additional citations forverification. Please helpimprove this article byadding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. Find sources: "Rabbit Fever" film – news ·newspapers ·books ·scholar ·JSTOR(October 2009) (Learn how and when to remove this message) |
Rabbit Fever is a 2010 feature-lengthdocumentary film directed by Amy Do, about the competition at the 2005 National Convention of theAmerican Rabbit Breeders' Association (ARBA), the largest assemblage of rabbits in the world.[1]
The film has found support from, among others, theIgnatz Award-winning artistJeffrey Brown, who illustrated the movie poster.[2] It was shown at the 8th San Francisco Documentary Film Festival in October 2009 as a work-in-progress.[3] The final work officiallypremiered in 2010.
Rabbit Fever was originally developed as a 20-minute project for Do's film class at theUniversity of Southern California. Do was encouraged by her instructor, directorCharles Braverman to expand it into a feature-length film.[4]
After much demand from her fans in the Rabbit Show community, Amy Do has made a Limited Release of her film which was and currently can be purchased on her website. It was released and shipped to the fans on September 12, 2012, nearly 9 years since the convention it was filmed at had occurred and nearly 3 years since the film was produced and aired for the first time.
Teens at the Rabbit Convention take part in the human pageant for the titles of "Rabbit Queen" and "Rabbit King".Rabbit Fever follows some of these contestants:
Others featured in the documentary include: