The Jungle Book is a 1967 American animated musical comedy film produced by Walt Disney Productions. Based on Rudyard Kipling's 1894 book of the same title, it is the 19th Disney animated feature film. Directed by Wolfgang Reitherman, it was the last film to be produced by Walt Disney, who died during its production, and the first animated feature film released after his death. The plot follows Mowgli, a feral child raised in the Indian jungle by wolves, as his friends Bagheera the panther and Baloo the bear try to convince him to leave the jungle before the evil tiger Shere Khan arrives.
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Peet created an original treatment, with little supervision, as he had done with One Hundred and One Dalmatians and The Sword in the Stone.[8] Peet decided to follow closely the dramatic, dark, and sinister tone of Kipling's book, which is about the struggles between animals and man. However, he also decided to make the story more straightforward, as the novel is very episodic, with Mowgli going back and forth from the jungle to the Man-Village, and Peet felt that Mowgli returning to the Man-Village should be the ending for the film. Following suggestions, Peet also created the character of Louie, king of the monkeys. Louie was a less comical character, enslaving Mowgli trying to get the boy to teach him to make fire. The orangutan would also show a plot point borrowed from The Second Jungle Book, gold and jewels under his ruins.[12][13] The ending also was very different from the final film's. After Mowgli had arrived to the man village, he would get into an argument with Buldeo the hunter which would cause him to return to the jungle with a torch that he would use to scare those who attacked or mocked him through the journey, before being dragged back to the ruins by Buldeo in search for the treasure. After recovering a great part of the treasure, Buldeo would declare his intentions to burn the jungle to avoid the threat of Shere Khan, only for the tiger to attack and kill him, before being killed by Mowgli with the hunter's gun. Due to his actions, Mowgli would be hailed as a hero in both the jungle and the village, and declared the first human to be part of the wolves' council.[12][13]
A major theme in the book is abandonment followed by fostering, as in the life of Mowgli, echoing Kipling's own childhood. The theme is echoed in the triumph of protagonists including Rikki-Tikki-Tavi and The White Seal over their enemies, as well as Mowgli's. Another important theme is of law and freedom; the stories are not about animal behaviour, still less about the Darwinian struggle for survival, but about human archetypes in animal form. They teach respect for authority, obedience, and knowing one's place in society with "the law of the jungle", but the stories also illustrate the freedom to move between different worlds, such as when Mowgli moves between the jungle and the village. Critics have also noted the essential wildness and lawless energies in the stories, reflecting the irresponsible side of human nature.
The tales in the book (as well as those in The Second Jungle Book, which followed in 1895 and includes eight further stories, including five about Mowgli) are fables, using animals in an anthropomorphic manner to teach moral lessons. The verses of "The Law of the Jungle", for example, lay down rules for the safety of individuals, families, and communities. Kipling put in them nearly everything he knew or "heard or dreamed about the Indian jungle".[5] Other readers have interpreted the work as allegories of the politics and society of the time.[6]
The academic Jopi Nyman argued in 2001 that the book formed part of the construction of "colonial English national identity"[31] within Kipling's "imperial project".[31] In Nyman's view, nation, race and class are mapped out in the stories, contributing to "an imagining of Englishness as a site of power and racial superiority."[31] Nyman suggested that The Jungle Book's monkeys and snakes represent "colonial animals"[31] and "racialized Others"[31] within the Indian jungle, whereas the White Seal promotes "'truly English' identities in the nationalist allegory"[31] of that story.[31]
From the opening sequence of young Mowgli (Neel Sethi) racing through the jungle in the company of his adoptive wolf family and his feline guardian, the black panther Bagheera (Ben Kingsley), through its comic setpieces with the layabout Baloo the Bear (Bill Murray) and its sinister interludes with the python Kaa (Scarlett Johansson), the despot orangutan King Louie (Christopher Walken), and the scarred Bengal tiger Shere Khan (Idris Elba), the movie bears you along on a current of enchantment, climaxing in a thunderous extended action sequence that dazzles while tying off every lingering plot point, and gathering up all the bits of folklore, iconography, and Jungian dream symbols that have been strewn throughout the story like Hansel and Gretel's breadcrumbs.
It's not accurate to call this "Jungle Book" a "live-action" version, since so much of it has been generated on a computer. But screenwriter Justin Marks, director Jon Favreau and their hundreds of collaborators render such distinctions moot. Combining spectacular widescreen images of rain forests, watering holes and crumbling temples, a couple of human actors, and realistic mammals, birds and reptiles that nevertheless talk, joke and even sing in celebrity voices, the movie creates its own dream-space that seems at once illustrated and tactile. It's the sort of movie you might inadvertently dream about after re-reading one of Rudyard Kipling's source books or re-watching the 1967 animated Disney film, both of which contributed strands of this one's creative DNA.
The movie takes these ideas and others seriously, but in a matter of fact way, so that they don't feel clumsily superimposed, but rather discovered within a text that has existed for more than a century. Kingsley's unhurried storybook narration hypnotizes the audience into buying everything Favreau shows us, as surely as Johansson's Kaa voice-work hypnotizes Mowgli. (The latter sequence includes one of the new movie's most extraordinary embellishments: as Mowgli stares into one of Kaa's eyes, he sees his own origin story play out within it.)
Everyone's favorite man-cub is back in Disney's all-new cinematic retelling of Rudyard Kipling's classic tale of self-discovery, The Jungle Book. Newcomer Neel Sethi takes on the role of Mowgli, one of the only live-action characters in the film, and is joined by an all-star cast of vocal talents that includes Scarlett Johansson (Kaa), Lupita Nyong'o (Raksha), Idris Elba (Shere Khan) and Bill Murray as the lovable bear Baloo. Director Jon Favreau (Iron Man, Chef) brings a modern sensibility and action-movie credibility to the film that will offer state-of-the-art technology to bring the story and jungle atmosphere to life.
From Sabu to Phil Harris and beyond, we all know the story of the jungle boy who was raised by beasts. Being human, he must grow up and align himself with his companions. Shre Khan, the tiger, is his adversary and vows to eventually kill Mowgli. It is high adventure based on a wonderful book by Rudyard Kipling. The special effects are about as good as they get in this one. It is pretty seamless and works throughout.
Mowgli is a man-cub found in the jungle by black panther Bagheera (Ben Kingsley), and raised by Raksha and the wolf pack. During the dry season, peace is declared but tiger Shere Khan (Idris Elba) threatens the pack for protecting Mowgli. Mowgli decides to leave and Bagheera directs him to the man-village. Shere Khan is angered by his escape and kills pack leader Akela. Lazy bear Baloo (Bill Murray) rescues him from Kaa the python. They harvest honey. There's also giant orangutan King Louie (Christopher Walken) who wants Mowgli to give him fire.The visual effects are amazing. This is as close to reality as these CGI have done so far. The animals are all visually compelling. The kid does well. There are three especially great voice work. Elba is threatening and Kingsley has gravitas. The surprising standout is Bill Murray. It's undeniably his voice and his character fits his comic sensibilities. The story works well although King Louie feels extraneous. By that point, I'm waiting for Mowgli to take on Shere Khan. The comedic break with Baloo is great but after Akela's death is revealed to Mowgli, the movie needs to push on with the confrontation with Shere Khan.
With their standing as one of the hottest brands in the entertainment business right now, it would be irresponsible of Marvel Studios not to be exploiting their popularity in every way possible. They seem well aware of this fact, as there isn't a medium in which Marvel isn't presently active or a demographic they're underserving. The centerpiece of the empire appears to be the steady stream of movies, whose all-audience appeal has generated nearly three billion dollars at the worldwide box office from just two of the most recent outings, Iron Man 3 and The Avengers. The recently-opened Thor: The Dark World won't soar as high, but it's already cleared its production budget domestically and doubled it internationally.Why stop there? The comic books on which all this was founded continue to be made. Characters so popular also lend to virtually every kind of merchandise imaginable. The obvious bases (toys and figures, Halloween costumes, video games, clothing, bedding, party supplies) are covered, as are less obvious ones (toothpaste, bath sets, vitamin gummies, Duck Tape, digital cameras, mini candy cane coin banks, USB drives, iPhone cases, wall decals, fabric). Furthermore, movies and television are certainly able to accommodate more than just one or two event films a year. Again, this isn't news to Marvel, which currently has three ongoing animated series running on Disney XD plus the well-performing "Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D." on ABC.Tuesday brings Iron Man & Hulk: Heroes United, a new direct-to-video movie seemingly tailored to young fans without digital cable or the willingness to commit to a full series. Two of Marvel's most super-sized personalities sharing a movie practically sells itself, especially at this time of year, when most have already gotten Iron Man 3 and Thor 2 won't be available to own for another few months. Heck, together they even make Christmas colors.The movie bears an Avengers Initiative logo on its cover, but its meaning is not immediately clear. Does it connect in some way to the different phases being defined in the Marvel Cinematic Universe as culminating with Avengers movies? Does it relate to Avengers: The Initiative, a Marvel Comics series that ran monthly from 2007 to 2010? Is it affiliated with the identically-titled "episodic series built exclusively for touch screen devices"? I've researched the matter and can't answer those questions, except to say that it doesn't seem to matter. If anything, this movie appears to launch a new series of direct-to-video movies that will pair up Avengers characters but not the whole dream team.Chronologically, Heroes United seems to predate the Avengers' assembly. Hulk and Iron Man begin the film as adversaries, who engage in battles of one-liners and one-upmanship. HYDRA has the Abomination take down Hulk, only to get them both placed in containment units. In the process, HYDRA creates a ball of electrical power that feeds on energy. Comic buffs will recognize that entity as Zzzax, a potent force that will come to assume a more anthropomorphic identity. After occupying one of Iron Man's many suits and getting into his arc reactor, that foe is formidable enough to require the two titular heavyweights to team up.Wrestling with their common enemy wreaks havoc on Hulk's eyesight and Iron Man's mobility. Accordingly, Iron Man becomes the green monster's eyes and Hulk his legs as the two do graveyard battle with the supposedly mythical Wendigoes. This of course leads to a climactic showdown with the Zzzax (two of whose Z's are silent). Heroes United sports TV-quality writing from two scribes with 25 years of cartoon credits between them. The computer animation resembles a video game, which appears to be the specialty of its makers, Brain Zoo Studios. The visuals are slick enough but not quite right, featuring insufficient lightning and shading, crude geometric sets, and limited motion. Our few glimpses of Tony Stark's face somehow approach Uncanny Valley but without the realistic detail of motion capture animation. It's clearly an economic production, which relies on a small cast of characters and lean storytelling. We're barely past the one-hour mark when end credits begin rolling. Those slim end credits omit a director while extensively featuring video game consultation credits that suggest this movie is simply the tie-in of a related video game. If so, though, it isn't clear when that game will be coming, if at all. It doesn't seem to be reaching stores this holiday season and the movie doesn't seem like something that anyone but Marvel's most die-hard fans remember well into next year.Adrian Pastor and Fred Tatasciore voice Iron Man and Hulk, respectively, having done the same for the characters' recent animated incarnations including "Avengers Assemble", "Ultimate Spider-Man", "Hulk and the Agents of S.M.A.S.H.", and the LEGO Marvel Super Heroes video game and TV special. For those like me who aren't versed in all those ventures, it's a bit of a challenge to accept anyone other than Robert Downey Jr. as Tony Stark. Tatasciore, whose vocal weight is presumably artificially enhanced, does have that Hulk quality. Still, each actor is saddled with some unfunny comedy here in this PG-rated, kid-oriented, Disney XD-ready production.In typical Marvel fashion, you'll want to stay through the end credits for a scene that seemingly sets up another movie. Possible spoiler alert: it features Red Skull and implies that Captain America and Iron Man will unknowingly be doing his bidding in the next adventure.Heroes United hits DVD, Blu-ray combo pack, and digital download on Tuesday from parent company Disney's Buena Vista Home Entertainment.Watch a clip from Iron Man & Hulk: Heroes United:VIDEO and AUDIOAside from the animation shortcomings addressed above, the Blu-ray's 1.78:1 visuals are as perfect as they can be, having clearly been given direct digital transfer from the computers on which they were made. The transfer is kind of impressive in a way, particularly in the atmospheric graveyard scene, even though the often monochromatic animation is a far cry from the likes of today's Pixar, DreamWorks, and Disney features.On the other hand, the 5.1 DTS-HD master audio is unequivocally dazzling. The film leans heavily on sound design to make up for the sort of lackluster imagery and the aggressive mix does not disappoint at all. The track delivers music, effects, and dialogue with the impact and directionality of a Marvel Studios live-action film. BONUS FEATURES, MENUS, PACKAGING and DESIGNThough the rear cover's claim that this is "Super Loaded with Extra Content" is a bit of an overstatement, the Blu-ray Disc in this set does supply three different bonus features.First up is Marvel "Inter-Missions", the latest application of Disney's favorite new Blu-ray technology. With this activated by default, ten seconds after you pause the movie, you will be treated to some content. The content is 10 minutes and 55 seconds worth of "Marvel Mash-Ups." What's a Marvel Mash-Up, you ask? Well, it's footage from old Marvel cartoons that has been re-edited and re-voiced to entertain in a way other than originally intended. Somewhere in between "YouTube Poop" and Fensler Films' redone G.I. Joe PSAs, these shorts feature things like Iron Man discussing his mullet and Hulk being angered by She-Hulk just wanting to say hello. Far more entertaining than the feature presentation, these irreverent bits are creative and display a contemporary sense of humor. Undoubtedly, some out there will wish the Blu-ray included complete, unedited episodes of these '70s to '90s cartoons lampooned, but I suspect the target audience for this release will get more enjoyment out of this. (Heroes United seems destined for similar treatment some day.) The Inter-Missions mode plays the clips in random order and returns you to where you were in the movie whenever you want.Next is "Marvel Team-Up with Ryan Penagos and Joe Q" (11:37), a chat between Marvel Entertainment CCO Joe Quesada and Penagos, Marvel Digital's executive editorial director. In L.A.'s Meltdown Comics, they talk about specific classic Marvel comics and how they made the Avengers more popular with creative character pairings. Unlike the disc's other content, this piece seems aimed at the more serious comic book buff. Finally, we get three additional Marvel Mash-Ups, each running 2 minutes and 2 seconds. These bits, two featuring Hulk and one with Iron Man, are not included in the Inter-Missions reel, but are created in the same witty mold. It's disappointing that those ones aren't viewable on their own, with direct access, subtitles, and ordinary rewind and fast-forward function.The DVD, the same one sold separately, includes "Marvel Team-Up" and the three Marvel Mash-Ups, but not the "Inter-Missions" Mash-Ups unfortunately.The discs open with trailers for Iron Man 3, "Hulk and the Agents of S.M.A.S.H.", "Avengers Assemble", and the video game LEGO Marvel: Super Heroes. The Sneak Peeks listings repeat those, but not before playing trailers for Frozen and The Jungle Book: Diamond Edition.The main menu plays clips and graphics in circles while score plays. The Blu-ray remembers where you left off unfinished but doesn't resume playback or let you set bookmarks.Topped by a snazzy embossed slipcover, the side-snapped blue keepcase holds the two plainly-labeled discs and a booklet with a unique code which not only unlocks the downloadable digital copy included with your purchase but a free digital comic. There are no Disney Movie Rewards points, but you can also get an Iron Man MiniMate action figure for just $2.59 shipping and processing.CLOSING THOUGHTSCharacters as iconic as Iron Man and Hulk deserve better than Heroes United, a cut-rate animated movie that stands as an unfortunate anomaly in this ongoing golden age of Marvel Entertainment. Though watchable enough, this production opts for underwhelming visuals and a threadbare narrative, knowing the brand is strong enough to attract an audience with even such modest effort. While it seems designed to start a new collection, a single viewing should suffice even fans of the franchise's current animated series.The Blu-ray combo pack adds definite value with its entertaining mash-ups, geeky comic book chat, and three redeemable inclusions. That's still not enough to justify this set being sold at the same price as one of Marvel's far more satisfying, rewatchable live-action blockbusters.Buy Iron Man & Hulk: Heroes United from Amazon.com:Blu-ray + DVD + Digital Copy / DVD / Instant Video 2ff7e9595c
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