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The Jungle Book (40th Anniversary Platinum Edition)

The Jungle Book (40th Anniversary Platinum Edition)
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The Jungle Book (40th Anniversary Platinum Edition)

 
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One of the most popular Disney films ever, THE JUNGLE BOOK is a song-filled celebration of friendship, fun, and adventure set in a lush and colorful world. Inspired by Rudyard Kipling's "Mowgli" stories, Disney's 19th animated masterpiece was the last animated feature that had Walt Disney's personal touch. The jubilant adventure begins when Mowgli, a little boy raised by wolves, is urged by his friend Bagheera, a wise old panther, to seek safety in the man village. Feeling very much at home in the jungle, Mowgli resists and runs off. Much to Bagheera's dismay, Mowgli meets a new friend with a happy-go-lucky philosophy of life -- Baloo the Bear, a lovable "jungle bum." Together, the three buddies find the journey back to civilization anything but civilized! They encounter a crazy orangutan, the hypnotic and sly snake Kaa, and the menacing Shere Khan! Fully restored for this 30th anniversary edition, this enduring classic swings with jazzy toe-tapping music, including the Academy Award(R)-nominated "The Bare Necessities," and the freewheeling "I Wan'na Be Like You"! A thrilling story for all ages, THE JUNGLE BOOK is an absolute necessity for your video collection.

 
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Product Details
Actors:Phil Harris, Sebastian Cabot, Louis Prima, Bruce Reitherman, George Sanders
Director:Wolfgang Reitherman
Format:AC-3, Animated, Closed-captioned, Color, Dolby, Dubbed, DVD, Restored, Special Edition, Widescreen, NTSC
Language:English
Number of Discs:2
Studio:Walt Disney Video
Run Time:78 minutes
DVD Release Date:October 02, 2007
Average Customer Rating: based on 287 reviews

Customer Reviews
Average Customer Review:4.5
Write an online review and share your thoughts with other customers.

4Great movie, fast shipping!  Jul 26, 2010
This is a great movie & was hard to find in stores. It was delivered before indicated on the shipping notification!

1 of 1 found the following review helpful:

4Mediocre By Disney Standards  Jul 12, 2010
Jungle Book, the movie, is radically different from the classic Rudyard Kipling novel but I tend to be more forgiving if a movie preserves the spirit of the book but in this case it absolutely doesn't. The characters are completely different and remain the same only in name and species. In particular the literary Baloo is nothing like the singing slacker from the movie. One might note that at the beginning it states that the movie was `inspired' by Kipling's Jungle Book and I assume by this it means that Disney was inspired to write a completely new story. The real question is whether or not the Jungle Book, standing on its own, is a quality animated movie. Of course it is, it's Disney but that doesn't mean it's spectacular. The Jungle Book is a rather small tale that takes place over the course of one or two days as Mowgli is taken by Bagheera and Baloo to live in the man village.

There are a few issues with the movie that can be a bit cringe worthy. The monkeys who kidnap Mowgli, including King Louis, are all portrayed as stereotypical blacks. Now one might argue that the movie does take place in Africa except it doesn't. The Jungle Book takes place in India which is in Asia. Why aren't the monkeys portrayed as stereotypical Indians? There is a tremendous amount of Disneyfication. In the book Mowgli grows to loath the humans for their treatment of his parents and uses elephants to raze the village to the ground. This is, shall we say, NOT the ending Disney went with. In the book Mowgli kills Shere Khan and skins him rather than having him scamper off with his tail on fire.

The animation is old fashioned yeoman type work but in this case that is a big compliment. There is no corner cutting here as each characters is drawn alive and active rather than static with moving mouths as cheaper animation studios will do. The character movement is very believable and I'm sure a ton of rotoscoping was done which I don't consider cheating in the least. Disney was well known for doing meticulous research on animal movement and Shere Kahn looks great as he stalks Mowgli. The music is very catchy including the python Kaa's `Trust in Me' and Baloo's wonderful `Bear Necessities'. Overall the animation is probably average or below average for a Disney movie (which are always above average for animation in general). It's very dark and often bland.

So what you get is a dramatically watered down story that kinds of leaves it a bit dull. It's just a one (or perhaps two) day journey to the man village and not a whole heckuva lot happens. There are segments where Mowgli meets a group of elephants and another with some buzzards imitating the Beatles (a rather unfortunate attempt to tap into some pop culture circa 1967). Both of these segments added nothing to the larger story which is paper thin. I like the concept behind The Jungle Book and there are great elements but if I were to start a collection of Disney movies The Jungle Book would be low on my movies to own.

5Granddaughter does the "Happy Dance"  Jun 26, 2010
We couldn't be happier! Not only did it come early but it is just as they said, New the price was phanominal. Don't hesitate to purchase from these people. I know that when it is time for more movies I will check with them first!

1 of 1 found the following review helpful:

5Get the Limited Issue Only  Jun 19, 2010
After researching all the other options and listening to other people's reviews, I decided to buy the Limited Issue version of this movie on DVD. The 40th Anniversary Edition has been hacked to pieces, and the editors did not catch the mistakes their editing caused by cutting off VITAL parts of the scenes. It is always better to watch a movie in its Original aspect ratio the way the Director intended.

5Love Disney  May 26, 2010
We love Disney movies and have most of them on DVD. Some of them can be pricey. This was a good buy.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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