There is something quietly unsettling about the world Mollie Elizabeth continues to build around her music. On the surface, 'Run Rabbit' glimmers with storybook whimsy and theatrical charm, but underneath the ornate melodies and vintage-pop textures sits a meditation on survival, memory and the emotional residue left behind by unstable childhood environments.
Rather than approaching trauma through stark confession or dramatic catharsis, Mollie Elizabeth filters it through surreal imagery and dark fairytale aesthetics, allowing discomfort to slowly creep in beneath the song’s playful exterior. The result feels strangely disarming, as though we have wandered into a beautifully decorated room only to realise something unsettling has been hidden beneath the wallpaper all along.
Musically, 'Run Rabbit' continues the identity that has quickly made Mollie Elizabeth one of the more intriguing emerging names in alternative pop. There are traces of old-Hollywood glamour woven into the production, but also a modern sharpness that keeps the song from feeling nostalgic for nostalgia’s sake. The arrangement balances delicacy with tension, allowing the sweetness of the melody to coexist with an undercurrent of emotional instability.
Vocally, she remains remarkably controlled throughout, as her performance leans into restraint, which ultimately gives the darker lyrical ideas far more impact. There are clear thematic links to earlier releases like 'Dog Eat Dog' and 'The Disappearing Girl', both of which explored vulnerability, emotional survival and the uneasy dynamics of human behaviour. But 'Run Rabbit' feels more fully realised somehow, both sonically and conceptually. The world-building feels tighter, and the emotional stakes sharper.
At just 21, Mollie Elizabeth already seems remarkably certain of the emotional universe she wants to inhabit artistically. 'Run Rabbit' strengthens the sense that she is building a strange, melancholic pop mythology where beauty and damage are constantly intertwined.








