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Jumanji

 
Movies:

Jumanji

  • AMG Rating: starstarstar
  • Genre: Fantasy
  • Movie Type: Fantasy Adventure, Children's Fantasy
  • Themes: Heroic Mission, Fantasy Lands, Finding a Way Back Home
  • Director: Joe Johnston
  • Main Cast: David Alan Grier, Adam Hann-Byrd, Robin Williams, Bonnie Hunt, Kirsten Dunst, Bradley Pierce, Bebe Neuwirth, Jonathan Hyde
  • Release Year: 1995
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 104 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: PG

Plot

Jumanji is a visually elaborate fantasy about an enchanted board game that opens a magical portal to a jungle universe. Two young children, Judy (Kirsten Dunst) and Peter (Bradley Pierce), discover the game in an abandoned home and suddenly are greeted by Alan (Robin Williams), an adult who has spent his life trapped inside the game since playing it at age 12. Alan's only hope for freedom involves finishing the game, but this proves rather dangerous, as Judy, Peter, and Alan find themselves running for their lives from huge rhinoceroses, evil monkeys, vicious lions, and other terrifying jungle beasts. Director Joe Johnston, whose special-effects background previously came to good use in Honey, I Shrunk the Kids, used groundbreaking computer imagery to simulate the thrills. ~ Judd Blaise, All Movie Guide

Review

The imaginative children's novel by Chris Van Allsburg becomes this successful, if a bit too sour, big-budget action-adventure. The basic idea of Jumanji (1995) is certainly an inventive and exciting one: a board game in which a player can be literally drawn into a savage jungle world upon a losing roll of the dice. Where the film seems to go wrong is in having its milquetoast hero disappear for so long, only to reappear as a physically tougher but emotionally wounded adult played by Robin Williams. What this story needs is a sense of joy, of a small-minded town too concerned about appearances and normalcy getting its comeuppance. Instead, an underlying sense of tragedy (parents undone by a child's disappearance, other kids orphaned, childhood scars holding adults back from moving on in life) scuttles the whole endeavor. Director Joe Johnston has all the trappings just right, and the computer-generated critters are sufficiently frightening, exciting, and realistic. It's the film's somber emotional content that saps what should have been a wild ride of the giddy vibe that should have been fueling the trip. ~ Karl Williams, All Movie Guide
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Wikipedia: Jumanji (film)
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Jumanji

Film poster
Directed by Joe Johnston
Produced by Robert W. Cort
Ted Field
Larry J. Franco
Written by Screenplay
Greg Taylor
Jonathan Hensleigh
Jim Strain
Novel
Chris Van Allsburg
Starring Robin Williams
Jonathan Hyde
Bonnie Hunt
Kirsten Dunst
Bradley Pierce
Bebe Neuwirth
David Alan Grier
Adam Hann-Byrd
Laura Bell Bundy
Patricia Clarkson
Music by James Horner
Cinematography Thomas Ackerman
Editing by Robert Dalva
Studio Interscope Communications
Teitler Film
Distributed by TriStar Pictures
Release date(s) December 15, 1995
Running time 104 minutes
Country United States
Language English
Budget $65 million
Gross revenue $262,797,249
Followed by Zathura

Jumanji is a 1995 American fantasy film directed by Joe Johnston and based on Chris Van Allsburg's popular 1981 short story of the same name. The story is about a supernatural and ominous board game which makes animals and other jungle hazards appear upon each roll of the dice. Expensive, state of the art computer graphics and animatronics were employed by Industrial Light & Magic for the special effects sequences. The film stars Robin Williams, Bonnie Hunt, Kirsten Dunst, Bradley Pierce and Jonathan Hyde.

It is dedicated to the memory of Stephen L. Price, an ILM visual effects supervisor who was involved with the film. This motion picture was shot in Keene, New Hampshire, Maine, and Vancouver, British Columbia.

Contents

Plot

In 1869, two boys bury a chest in a forest near Brantford, New Hampshire. When one boy asks what will happen if someone unearths it, the other replies "May God have mercy on his soul." The sound of tribal drums is heard as the boys ride away.

A century later, 12-year-old Alan Parrish (Hann-Byrd) flees on his bicycle from a gang of bullies, then runs into his father Sam's (Hyde) shoe factory, where he meets his friend Carl Bentley (Grier), one of Sam's employees. When Alan damages a shoe that Carl designed, Carl takes the blame and loses his job. Outside the factory, the bullies steal Alan's bike. Alan then walks past a nearby construction site, hears drumbeats, and finds the buried chest, which contains a board game called "Jumanji".

After taking the game home, Alan has an argument with his father, who wants to send him to boarding school. Alan prepares to run away, but his friend Sarah Whittle (Bundy), who is the lead bully's girlfriend, arrives with Alan's bicycle. Alan and Sarah begin a game of Jumanji, which behaves strangely: When a player rolls the dice, the player's piece moves itself and a message appears in the middle of the board. The goal is to reach the center of the board and say "Jumanji". On their first moves, Alan is sucked into the board and Sarah is chased away by bats. The message for Alan's move was In the jungle you must wait, until the dice read 5 or 8.

26 years later, Judy and Peter Shepherd (Dunst and Pierce) move into the Parrish house with their aunt Nora (Neuwirth) after losing their parents in a skiing accident. They hear Jumanji's drumbeats and find the board game in the attic. When they begin playing, they are attacked by giant mosquitoes, crazed monkeys, and a lion. When Peter rolls a five, Alan emerges from the Jumanji jungle as an adult (Williams). Alan then goes to the shoe factory, which is now closed, and learns that, after his disappearance, his father lost interest in the business and Carl became a police officer.

When rolling the dice has no effect on the board, Alan realizes they are continuing the game started in 1969. The next move is Sarah's. They find Sarah (Hunt), who has been traumatized by the game and its aftermath and refuses to play. However, the destruction caused by the game will not disappear until someone wins. Alan tricks Sarah into rolling the dice, and the following moves release man-eating vines, a hunter named Van Pelt, a stampede of rhinos, elephants and zebras, and a pelican that steals the board.

Increasingly relentless havoc ensues: Among other things, Peter turns into a monkey; Peter, Sarah and Judy battle Van Pelt in a hardware store; Carl's police car is swallowed by a flower; Alan becomes trapped in the floor; and an earthquake splits the house in two.

Finally, Van Pelt tries to shoot Alan, but Alan wins the game by dropping the dice. When he says "Jumanji", all of the animals and other effects of the game, including Van Pelt, are sucked back into the board. With the game over, Alan and Sarah find themselves in 1969 again, as children, but retaining their memories of the game. Alan admits his guilt for destroying Carl's shoe, Carl gets his job back, and Sam tells Alan he doesn't have to go to boarding school. Alan and Sarah then throw the Jumanji board into a river.

26 years later, Alan and Sarah are married, Alan has taken over the shoe business, and Carl still works there. When Judy, Peter, and their parents visit the Parrishes, Alan and Sarah offer the parents jobs in the shoe company and discourage them from taking their planned skiing vacation. Sometime in the future, two French girls hear drumbeats as they walk along a beach, where the Jumanji board is buried in the sand.

Cast

Reception

Jumanji did well in the box office; it took in $100,475,249 in the United States and Canada and $162,322,000 overseas, totaling to $262,797,249.[1]

Legacy

  • There was an animated series based on the film that ran from 1996–1999. In 1996 it was carried by the UPN network, but later seasons were syndicated by BKN. While it followed the film's plot, there were a few changes, such as the exclusion of Bonnie Hunt's character, and some changes to the age and relationship of David Alan Grier's character. Each turn, the player was given a "game clue" and then sucked into the jungle until they solved their clue. Robin Williams' character had missed his clue and was continually searching for it in order to escape the board game. At the end, the kids ultimately succeed in helping to free him from the game by finding out what his clue was.
  • Milton Bradley released a board game that was equipped with not only the game clues from the film, but also some new ones. The elephant, zebras, pelican, crocodile, man-eating plants, and barb-shooting plants have their own clues. The board game has a doomsday grid where a card would go if the other players don't roll the required rescue item in time. If the grid fills up, the game will end if a card lands on this space: "A card placed here brings dreadful news: The game is done, all players lose."
  • Zathura is a spiritual sequel that was based on a novel of the same name.
  • For several years after Jumanji was filmed, tire marks from the car crash into the "Sav-a-lot" could be seen on the ground in the Liquidation World in Tsawwassen, BC, until the building was subsequently demolished for a new development. They served as a constant reminder for Tsawwassen residents about the hype the filming of the movie meant to the town.

Riddles From The Game

  • At night they fly, you'd better run; these winged things are not much fun - Bats
  • In the jungle you must wait until the dice read five or eight - Alan is sucked into the game
  • A tiny bite can make you itch, make you sneeze, make you twitch - Mosquitoes
  • This will not be an easy mission, monkeys slow the expedition - Monkeys
  • His fangs are sharp, he likes your taste; your party better move poste haste - Lion
  • They grow much faster than bamboo, take care or they'll come after you - Barb-shooting and man-eating plants
  • A hunter from the darkest wild who makes you feel just like a child - Van Pelt
  • Don't be fooled it isn't thunder; staying put would be a blunder - Stampede
  • A law of Jumanji has been broken, you will go back even more than your token - Peter tries to cheat
  • Every month at the quarter moon, there'll be a monsoon in your lagoon - Monsoon
  • Beware the ground on which you stand; the floor is quicker than the sand - Quicksand
  • There is a lesson you will learn; sometimes you must go back a turn - Judy saves Alan from sinking
  • Need a hand while you just wait? We'll help you out we each have eight - Spiders
  • You're almost there with much at stake, but now the ground begins to quake - Earthquake
  • Jumanji - Game Over

References

  1. ^ "Jumanji (1995)". Box Office Mojo. http://www.boxofficemojo.com/movies/?id=jumanji.htm. Retrieved 2009-07-03. 

External links


 
 
Learn More
Chris Van Allsburg (Writer / Illustrator)
Jumanji (1995 Album by James Horner)
Stephen L. Price (Actor, Children's/Family/Fantasy)

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