
Night of the Lepus
1972 • Horror, Science Fiction • PG
Rancher Cole Hillman is fed up of rabbits plaguing his fields. Zoologist Roy Bennett conducts an experiment to curb their population, but it gives rise to giant rabbits that terrorise the town.
Runtime: 1h 28m
Why you should read the novel
Before you watch Night of the Lepus (1972), discover the original source: The Year of the Angry Rabbit by Russell Braddon, a biting English-language science-fiction satire with surprising depth and relevance.
Braddon’s novel replaces creature-feature scares with darkly comic political intrigue. A breakthrough intended to control Australia’s rabbit problem ignites a whirlwind of power plays, profiteering, and moral compromise that ripples across the globe.
Read The Year of the Angry Rabbit to experience the original ideas, tone, and themes untouched by adaptation—smart, sharp, and provocative. It’s perfect for readers who love political satire, classic speculative fiction, and thought-provoking worldbuilding.
Adaptation differences
Tone and genre diverge dramatically. Night of the Lepus plays the premise as straight-faced eco-horror with rampaging giant rabbits, while Russell Braddon’s book is a satirical, darkly comic send-up of politics, media, and militarism.
The core premise changes. The film uses hormone experiments that create enormous, predatory rabbits in the American Southwest; the novel centers on Australia’s attempt to eradicate rabbits with a super-potent biological solution—no giant creatures—triggering unintended geopolitical consequences.
Scope and themes shift. The movie focuses on local survival, creature attacks, and tactical containment, whereas the book zooms out to national and international fallout: arms-race logic, government overreach, corporate leverage, propaganda, and the ethics of deterrence.
Character focus and structure differ. On screen, a small circle of scientists, ranchers, and officials confront an immediate physical threat in action-driven set pieces. In the novel, politicians, advisers, and power brokers drive the story, their choices reshaping global order and delivering pointed satire instead of a conventional monster-movie climax.
Night of the Lepus inspired from
The Year of the Angry Rabbit
by Russell Braddon