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* FantasyCreep: The TV series adaptation introduced some magical elements in the closing points of the series (when it had run out of material from the book).
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* AvoidTheDreadedGRating: Seemingly attempted but ultimately averted. Holds the accolade of being the only film to be granted a U―Certificate from the BBFC to contain the words "piss off" within the dialogue. Though played straight in the US where it warrants a PG. It did, however, get a G in Canada.

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* AvoidTheDreadedGRating: Seemingly attempted but ultimately averted. Holds the accolade of being the only film to be granted a U―Certificate from the BBFC to contain the words "piss off" within the dialogue. Though This was played straight in the US release where it warrants a PG.was rated the more suitable PG rating. It did, however, get a G in Canada.
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Among the other noteworthies in the vocal cast are Creator/HarryAndrews as General Woundwort, the cruel and authoritarian chief rabbit of a neighboring warren, Creator/DenholmElliott as cowslip, the strange and ultimately treacherous rabbit in another warren with a sinister secret, Creator/ZeroMostel as the cranky but friendly seagull Kehaar, and Creator/MichaelHordern as the narrator and the voice of the rabbit's creator deity Frith.

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Among the other noteworthies in the vocal cast are Creator/HarryAndrews as General Woundwort, the cruel and authoritarian chief rabbit of a neighboring warren, Creator/DenholmElliott as cowslip, Cowslip, the strange and ultimately treacherous rabbit in another warren with a sinister secret, Creator/ZeroMostel as the cranky but friendly seagull Kehaar, and Creator/MichaelHordern as the narrator and the voice of the rabbit's creator deity Frith.
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Trope was cut/disambiguated due to cleanup


%%* GutturalGrowler: Woundwort.
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* AlternativeForeignThemeSong: The Japanese version theme song is ''For Life'' by Yosui Inoue.
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A 1978 British animated film directed by Martin Rosen, adapted from the 1972 [[Literature/WatershipDown novel of the same name]] by Creator/RichardAdams.

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A 1978 British animated drama film directed by Martin Rosen, adapted from the 1972 [[Literature/WatershipDown novel of the same name]] by Creator/RichardAdams.
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The song is the same in Japan. For Life is the name of the record company.


* AlternativeForeignThemeSong: The Japanese version has For Life by Yosui Inoue.
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* AlternativeForeignThemeSong: The Japanese version has For Life by Yosui Inoue.
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** Tab the farm cat ambushes and pins Hazel, faster than the human eye can follow.
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* HumansAreCthulhu: To the eyes of the rabbits, humans are incomprehensible, incredibly powerful entities, capable of destroying an entire warren with casual ease and barely even noticing them in the process. Even when the rabbits don't recognize something as human-made, they are usually quick to realize how far beyond them it is: for instance, perceiving a train as an entity of divine punishment. Paradoxically they also cannot see the reasoning in human's more merciful actions. Hazel's life is only spared after being caught by Tab the farm cat because Tab's beloved human owner, Lucy, implores her pet to release him because it's "cruel".

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* HumansAreCthulhu: To the eyes of the rabbits, humans are incomprehensible, incredibly powerful entities, capable of destroying an entire warren with casual ease and barely even noticing them in the process. Even when the rabbits don't recognize something as human-made, they are usually quick to realize how far beyond them it is: for instance, perceiving a train as an entity of divine punishment. Paradoxically they also cannot see the reasoning in human's more merciful actions. Hazel's life is only spared after being caught by Tab the farm cat because Tab's beloved human owner, Lucy, implores her adored pet to release him because it's "cruel".
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* HumansAreCthulhu: To the eyes of the rabbits, humans are incomprehensible, incredibly powerful entities, capable of destroying an entire warren with casual ease and barely even noticing them in the process. Even when the rabbits don't recognize something as human-made, they are usually quick to realize how far beyond them it is: for instance, perceiving a train as an entity of divine punishment.

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* HumansAreCthulhu: To the eyes of the rabbits, humans are incomprehensible, incredibly powerful entities, capable of destroying an entire warren with casual ease and barely even noticing them in the process. Even when the rabbits don't recognize something as human-made, they are usually quick to realize how far beyond them it is: for instance, perceiving a train as an entity of divine punishment. Paradoxically they also cannot see the reasoning in human's more merciful actions. Hazel's life is only spared after being caught by Tab the farm cat because Tab's beloved human owner, Lucy, implores her pet to release him because it's "cruel".
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* RootingForTheEmpire: Ailurophiles actually have a lot of sympathy with Tab. Hazel teases her that he can run faster than her which is obviously true. However she later effortlessly captures him using stealth and surprise, making him eat his words and ramming home to him where rabbits lie in relation to felines in the "circle of life". Only the intervention of Tab's owner, Lucy the farmer's daughter, saves him.

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