In the original version of the film, as Herman is leaving the set, he looks underneath the dress of his 'nanny' and extends his finger and points in delight. The Finger Family Song. A scene at the beginning of the film depicts a diaper-clad Baby Herman stomping off the set and underneath the dress of a woman. It is about to ruin our childhoods now! He constantly smokes and hits on women. Who Framed Roger Rabbit is a 1988 American live-action/animated mystery comedy film directed by Robert Zemeckis, produced by Frank Marshall and Robert Watts, and written by Jeffrey Price and Peter S. Seaman.Loosely based on the 1981 novel Who Censored Roger Rabbit? Toons run in to see Doom's remains and Eddie reveals him to the arriving police officers as Teddy, Marvin, and Maroon's killer, thus clearing Roger's name. Baby Herman is featured in the beginning of the film, Who Framed Roger Rabbit. After Baby Herman "encourages" his handler to head downstairs to pick up something for him, leaving him alone with Valiant, Herman tries to convince Valiant that Roger is innocent of murdering Acme, citing his long-time relationship with Roger as friends and co-workers as an incentive to his belief Roger is being framed for the murder. What an a-hole! The image quality isn't great—it suffers from graininess, oversaturated colors, and dimness—but at least you completists have your "lost" footage. Sometime later, Baby Herman is outside the office of Valiant & Valiant Private Investigators when Eddie Valiant returns and discovers him when he notices Baby Herman's handler lighting up his cigar. He then produces a newspaper with the headline mentioning that Acme left no will behind regarding Toontown's future should anything happen to him. Valiant has a hard time believing it due to Acme's history as a prankster and thinks Herman and the rest of the Toons are being duped. The altered version is still raunchy, but not as bad.

Baby Herman is featured in the beginning of the film, Who Framed Roger Rabbit.

Baby Herman is featured in the beginning of the film, Who Framed Roger Rabbit.

He has the body of a baby, but he's actually a man, so it's not shocking that he'd have grown male tendencies.

The altered version is still raunchy, but not as bad. The trolls on the internet have posted and popularized some pictures and clips from our favorite childhood TV shows and movies that are awkward, inappropriate and sexual!

Internet is full of trolls! "Who Framed Roger Rabbit." A scene cut from the theatrical version where Jessica rolls up her dress to reveal her stockings as she sits cross-legged is included in this sequence. More on middle fingers in a second, but yeah, as recently as the Blu-ray release you can see that Baby Herman’s middle finger has been painted over digitally. Join us for the Finger Family Song, which people sometimes call the Family Finger Song or Baby Finger. Years from now, the scene that will be the defining moment in the film will come when his character is apprehended by the authorities.

Eddie discovers that Roger inadvertently wrote a love letter for Jessica on Marvin's will, which was written in Fleischer also voiced Benny the Cab, Psycho, and Greasy. Or Daddy Finger :) Watched frame-by-frame, the scene reveals Baby Herman extending his middle finger just before jumping underneath the skirt and re-emerging with a spot of drool on his upper lip. A grown baby mainly called, with his mob mentality and his cigar, he is the right baby for the job.

However, Herman argues that since it was Valiant's fault that got Roger into trouble with Judge Doom, it should be Valiant who gets him out of it. As he is leaving he walks between a woman's legs and says "Move it … Another risque scene appears at the beginning, when the diaper-clad Baby Herman, who’s voiced by an adult, angrily stomps off the set.

In the original version of the film, as Herman is leaving the set, he looks underneath the dress of his "nanny" and extends his finger and points in delight. Herman knows that Acme promised to entrust Toontown to the Toons in his will, and gave his solid oath that he would upon his death. Despite this, he cares about Roger and considers him a good friend.

He has the body of a baby, but he's actually a man, so it's not shocking that he'd have grown male tendencies. Off-set, he reveals that he is really a middle-aged man with a gravelly voice who only looks like a baby.