As lovely to behold as it is engrossing to watch, The Jungle Book is the rare remake that actually improves upon its predecessors — all while setting a new standard for CGI.
Title: | The Jungle Book (2016) |
IMDB Rating: | 7.5/10 from 191632 users Updated : 2017-03-28 |
Rotten Rating: | 7.7/10 |
RottenTomatoes: | 95% 87% |
Genres: | Adventure , Drama , Family , Fantasy |
Actors: | Neel Sethi , Bill Murray , Ben Kingsley , Idris Elba , Lupita Nyong’o , Scarlett Johansson , Giancarlo Esposito , Christopher Walken ,Garry Shandling , Brighton Rose , Emjay Anthony , Max Favreau , Chloe Hechter , Asher Blinkoff , Knox Gagnon |
Director: | Jon Favreau |
Trailer
Download
https://rarbg.to/torrent/wuhesb7
Review
“The Jungle Book” was one of my favorite TV series that aired in the Doordarshan in the early ’90s. The story has been retold through several movies and this latest blockbuster also does the same. It tells the story of Mowgli, a young boy, grown by a pack of wolves in an Indian Jungle. Disney Pictures this time takes into the CGI over the conventional 2D animation and creates a stunningly superb visual feast. It’s certainly something very different you’ve ever seen. The jungles, animals are all a part of a CGI animation and with the superb techniques you’re taken to an hour long drive to the forests in which everything looks for real. Instead of the distant shots, the film uses close shots for which the film looks visually pleasing. No doubt, technically the film is somewhat a testimony of something you’ve ever encountered in movies.
The acting of the boy as Mowgli and his screen presence looks astounding and the voices given to the animals get quite well. But the grave problem in the film is the lack of the wittiness and charm in its narrative. For one third of the film, there seems a bit of charm and laughter which soon disappears and falls into the computer glitches. Somewhere the innocence, wit, and surprises get lost for which the film though being technically superb starts to lose your attention by the second half.
Rating: 1.5 stars out of 4