Rabbit
Rabbit is a twisted, neoclassical horror about a young woman trying to find her abducted twin sister.
30 November 1989, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia
13 February 1970, Tidworth, Hampshire, England, UK
24 January 1978, Brasschaat, Flanders, Belgium
August 30, 2017
Rabbit lacks the mainstream audience appeal of the standard genre film, but amongst horror fans, this will likely spread to other parts of the world.
September 06, 2018
With a plot guaranteed to divide audiences and more than a little improbability, this is certainly a hard movie to get a handle on at times. Yet Clemens is fine in two roles, Veerle Baetens is memorable as Nerida and there are plenty of ominous moments.
August 09, 2017
Showcases strong work from its two promising leads and striking location photography, but doesn't finally make a lick of sense.
June 11, 2018
....a great new Australian thriller: well-paced, smartly plotted, and brilliantly unsettling.
October 20, 2018
A powerful mix of Australia's natural beauty and that same landscape's inherent embrace of nightmares.
May 15, 2018
The emptiness of the Australian wilderness has seldom looked so beautifully threatening, the wide desolation paradoxically feeling claustrophobic.
August 21, 2018
Though the film suffers from minor pacing issues, likely related to balancing many ideas with a heavy atmosphere, it never feels like a freshman feature.
September 29, 2017
Rabbit expertly blends together several genres-sci-fi, medical horror, and psychological thriller-and goes in some very unexpected directions.
September 08, 2018
A tense, atmospheric and visually rich psychological horror thriller, Rabbit marks the arrival of director Luke Shanahan, with his feature film debut strong in ideas and presentation.
September 26, 2017
With its dreamy visuals and themes of good versus evil, Rabbit has the makings of a contemporary fairytale.
July 19, 2018
Through the skill of the experienced cast and crew, Rabbit is [a] watchable fairytale thriller.
October 31, 2018
Rabbit may be a bit slow and the story may be lacking in some areas, but a superb lead performance and beautiful cinematography help it to mostly overcome its faults.

