Is the 'Rabbit Rabbit' Movie in 'American Horror Stories' Real?

Publish date: 2024-05-30

The 3rd installment of ‘American Horror Stories’ facilities on a appearing of ‘Rabbit Rabbit’ at a drive-in. But is the movie if truth be told real?

Jamie Lerner - Author

There’s not anything extra terrifying than gazing a tv display that shows us how intense films can make us feel. And the newest installment of American Horror Stories does that in "Drive In." This episode focuses on a bunch of teens as they attend a drive-in appearing of the most cursed movie of historical past, Rabbit Rabbit.

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According to AHS lore, when Rabbit Rabbit premiered in 1986, six folks died in a massacre that same evening. So, in a nod to track censoring, Tipper Gore bans Rabbit Rabbit and sentences its director, Larry Bitterman (John Carroll Lynch), to fifteen years in jail. Now, he and his film wreak havoc on a brand new era. So is this infamous murderous movie if truth be told real?

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‘Rabbit Rabbit’ from ‘American Horror Stories’ isn’t a real movie, but it surely is in accordance with a real legend.

The title, Rabbit Rabbit, if truth be told comes from an previous English custom. In the early twentieth century, it was recorded in Notes and Queries that children would get up and say their rabbits on the first day of the month for good luck. “Saying their rabbits” implies that they might say “rabbit, rabbit, rabbit,” and if they didn’t say it, they might have bad luck.

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While this was once originally recorded in British historical past, President Franklin D. Roosevelt used to be infamously superstitious. The Nottingham Evening Post wrote in 1935, “Even Mr. Roosevelt, the President of the United States, has confessed to a chum that he says 'Rabbits' on the first of every month — and, what is more, he would no longer call to mind omitting the utterance on any account.”

He was once the president for 4 terms, so maybe there’s something to it.

The legend of the ‘Rabbit Rabbit’ movie in ‘American Horror Stories’ is in line with some real-life cinematic lore.

While Rabbit Rabbit itself isn’t a real movie, nor is Larry Bitterman a real director (but what a reputation, right?), its horrific legend is based in truth. According to the U.K.’s Mirror, the movie Antrum is cursed. The creators of the film say that the movie “contains a 'secret' which is able to best be seen by some audiences — and those who witness it are 'certain to die.’”

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Okay, um, that’s *terrifying.* And other people need to willingly see this? Apparently. The movie was once supposedly made in the 1970s, now not dissimilar to Rabbit Rabbit, which used to be made in the 1980s. Antrum, regardless that, is a couple of pair of siblings dealing with the grief over their puppy canine and digging their approach to hell to “rescue their pet’s soul.”

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In a appearing of the movie in 1988, the cinema caught hearth, and Fifty six folks were killed through the freak twist of fate. In a later 1993 showing in San Francisco, the development exploded, killing 30 audience participants.

That does now not sound like a movie we need to see, however director Eric Thirteen wanted to bring Antrum: The Deadliest Film Ever Made to as many people as possible. Sound familiar? We can’t help but suppose American Horror Stories attracts some direct inspiration.

There are different motion pictures that have claimed to kill other folks or no less than cause them to unwell.

One of those motion pictures is referenced in American Horror Stories: Drive In. That movie is, in fact, The Exorcist. In AHS, Larry stocks that it’s the movie that conjures up him to make use of the methods of cinema to instill true worry into the audience. He claims that he if truth be told labored on making The Exorcist (which, of course, isn’t true since Larry is a fictional persona).

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What is real, even though, is that people did document illness from looking at The Exorcist. There have been reviews of nausea, vomiting, fainting, and even center attacks from staring at the movie in theaters. Another film that led to a an identical response among girls was the 1931 Dracula, which is also referenced in this episode of American Horror Stories.

Both referential and humorously self-deprecating, American Horror Stories: Drive In hits the mark in terms of being scarily good.

Watch new episodes of American Horror Stories each and every Thursday on FX on Hulu.

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