The short era of liberalization ended gradually when
Leonid Brezhnev took power in the Soviet Union and introduced a conservative, more repressive course on cultural issues. The film, alongside eleven other cinematic works that were deemed politically damaging, was banned by the Central Committee of the SED at its XI Plenum in December 1965. It was only made legal again in 1990. The banned films were known as "cellar films" or "rabbit films" - the second sobriquet having been derived from the film's title. In 1990, shortly before the collapse of the Eastern Bloc, the picture was released for public screening, and presented in the Berlin and Locarno film festivals. In 1995 it was selected as one of the 100 most important German films by a group of historians and critics. Daniela Berghahn noted that
The Rabbit Is Me was unprecedented in its portrayal of judicial corruption, sexual themes and criticism of the East German establishment. ==References==