Mowgli: Legend of the Jungle
Adventure • Drama
Theatrical Release (US)
~ The greatest journey is finding where you belong ~
Overview:
A human child raised by wolves, must face off against a menacing tiger named Shere Khan, as well as his own origins.
Director:
Andy Serkis
Status:
Released
Language:
English
Buget:
$175,000,000.00
Revenue:
$0.00
Key words:
Cast
Rohan Chand
~ as ~
Mowgli
Christian Bale
Bagheera (voice)
Cate Blanchett
Kaa (voice)
Benedict Cumberbatch
Shere Khan (voice)
Naomie Harris
Nisha (voice)
Baloo (voice)
Peter Mullan
Akela (voice)
Jack Reynor
Brother Wolf (voice)
Eddie Marsan
Vihaan (voice)
Tom Hollander
Tabaqui (voice)
Gimly
Written 6 year(s) ago
Kamurai
Written 4 year(s) ago
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Two live-action Jungle Book adaptations in as many (and a half) years. The general consensus seems to be that the Disney version is great, and this one is not. Personally, I'm not huge on either of them. But I can see strength in the argument that the other one is at least better.
Final rating:★★ - Had some things that appeal to me, but a poor finished product.
Good watch, probably won't watch again, and can recommend if you're just looking for another version of "The Jungle Book".
I will say they definitely had the budget for a decent production value, and while Mowgli is almost the only person in the movie, I can definitely say that Rohan Chand is a great child actor, and everyone should be watching him going forward.
Someone was upset that Disney had "The Jungle Book" made as a family friendly, charming movie, and when Netflix was giving away jobs, he jumped in and said, "It's time for the Nolan treatment!" and made a grittier more nuanced than intuitive version.
This version goes much too far into the politics of the Jungle, and does some really strange re-casts of the characters. Baloo is almost a pirate captain, or an old military commander (because you remember how when the English conquered India, the Indian fought back on bear calvary, right?), and Louie is replaced with a friendly Kaa (still in charge of "the monkey people"), and they specifically go into who is in the pack and who isn't and what laws are being broken. They even added a new character just to put them in the FRIDGE: I really thought we were done with that trope (it's probably a cliche now).
The action is almost all flippant, it doesn't amount to much and it's all shot a little funny to me. They also added a Gaston / Clayton character as an antagonist so there are alleged twists on how both must be handled.
The dialogue is mostly fine, but this is LONG, about 1 hr 45 mins, but feels like 2 hrs 30 min. The story arcs feel more like a run on sentence: looking back I can identify an establishing Act, a climatic Act, and something in the middle that must have been the 2nd act, where all the strife happens, but the weight definitely isn't equal amongst the 3. There is also no graduating: the fable aspect is long gone, there is not "leveling", Mowgli is the same punk kid as when the movie started, he's just stupid enough to challenge a tiger in open terrain (yes, there's more to that, but it wouldn't matter).
I even like the movie, but this version takes out what little I found special from the Disney versions and replaces it with Batman levels of inner conflict over his identity.