From what I can tell this adaptation of Kipling’s “The
Jungle Book” isn’t really an adaptation.
The filmmakers used pieces of the original story and Disney’s famous animated
version but pretty much made up their own tale for the most part. It’s about a dude named Mowgli (Jason Scott
Lee (Dragon: The Bruce Lee Story, Soldier)
who was raised in the jungles of India by wolves and a bear and…hold on a
sec. Those animals aren’t native to
India. Oh whatever, so anyway he’s been
in the wilderness for so long that he forgot what it means to be a civilized
man, including speaking any recognizable language, and acts like his wild
animal brothers and sisters. He
eventually stumbles upon English colonists and they try to get him to behave
like a domesticated human again while also attempting to pump him for info on
hidden treasure.
The story is surprisingly well crafted. They start with the familiar Jungle Book shit that you’ve seen from
Disney before to get you on board but then they change everything up to focus
on Mowgli’s re-entry into society and the challenges that that brings (interestingly
this version was also made by Disney, sure it was a totally different era in
the company’s history but still they decided not to do a straight live action
version of their animated feature and I appreciate that). Probably the deepest the film goes is in one
particularly thought-provoking scene between Mowgli and the villain, played by
the brilliant Cary Elwes (Shadow of the
Vampire, Dracula (1992)), where Mowgli can’t grasp why someone would want
to kill another human if it wasn’t for the purpose of gathering food or
defending yourself. Elwes doesn’t really
have an answer for him except “…because he’s your enemy”.
There are times when the story is incredibly rushed
though. Like Mowgli learns to speak
English and adopt English customs in what seems like only a week. Or he discovers mountains of treasure in
Monkey City and then suddenly runs into the modern English folks in what feels
like the same afternoon. This was all
done for the purpose of simply moving things along and in this case I don’t
mind it that much. The love triangle
between Mowgli, the love interest (Lena Headey (Dredd)) and the bad guy is constructed quickly but takes its time
once you know where everyone stands. And
that’s what’s impressive. The whole
middle of the picture is completely focused on these three playing off of each
other and holds back on integrating pointless action scenes. I got invested.
The other very strong aspect of the film is the
cinematography. This is one fuckin’
pretty picture man. Juan Ruiz Anchia (Glengarry Glen Ross) did a gorgeous job
capturing the beauty of India (they did actually film there) by keeping
lighting and colors vibrant. There’s a
lot of movement with the camera too but it’s always graceful and makes the
movie feel a little more important than it actually is.
The production designer, Allan Cameron (Showgirls, Starship Troopers), also makes the film feel bigger and
more elegant with the great costumes and ridiculous set design. He nailed turn of the century India in the
most fantastic (and I’m sure totally unrealistic) way that you picture it in
your mind. I absolutely love the way
this thing looks.
Bad director Stephen Sommers (Deep Rising) did this and I knew that going in. I was prepared for something way less
thoughtful like The Mummys he did but,
shit, I gotta give him credit for making a damn fine movie, his best that I’ve
seen. However I wanna say that he was
probably limited with the budget and this forced him to make something with
less action and more character development than he probably would’ve done
otherwise (watch his other pictures and you’ll see what I mean). That didn’t stop him from inserting two closeup
shots of a horrible looking fuckin’ CGI snake though.
So overall wow, this is actually a really good movie. There are so many neat things in here like a
real long stretch with no dialogue where it’s Mowgli interacting with animals
and humans and it’s crystal clear what he’s communicating, they managed to use
real live animals (with one exception, see above) for the characters that
required it instead of some sort of animation or animatronics or etc, and the
casting is spot on.
If you don’t mind anthropomorphized animals (which is a
small part of the film but when it’s in there it’s at full bore) and the story
abandoning the Jungle Book you know
for its own thang then there’s a real cool picture here about what it means to
be human, or something.
Oh and you also have to be ok with a body count that’s astonishingly
high for a family movie. There are six
confirmed kills, including an asshole that gets buried alive, and then another at
least seven unconfirmed deaths (mostly humans murdering other humans by the
way). Oh right and torture. I guess you gotta be alright with that
too. Hey, this ain’t your father’s Jungle Book.
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