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The Jungle Book 2 is a 2003 American animated film produced by the DisneyToons studio in Sydney, Australia and released by Walt Disney Pictures and Buena Vista Distribution. The theatrical version of the film was released in France on February 5, 2003, and released in the United States on February 14, 2003. The film is a sequel to Walt Disney's 1967 film The Jungle Book, and stars Haley Joel Osment as the voice of Mowgli and John Goodman as the voice of Baloo. The film was originally produced as a direct-to-video film, but was released theatrically first, similar to the Peter Pan sequel, Return to Never Land. It is the third Disney sequel to have a theatrical release rather than going direct-to-video after The Rescuers Down Under in 1990 and Return to Neverland in 2002. The film is a continuation of The Jungle Book by Rudyard Kipling and is not based on The Second Jungle Book. However, they do have several characters in common. When released, it was criticised mainly for the quality of its animation and the similarity of its plotline to the original film. Disney released VHS and DVD versions on June 10, 2003.

Plot[]

Mowgli is living in the Man Village with the girl who lured him in, Shanti, his adopted brother Ranjan, and their parents. However, Mowgli longs to return to the fun of the jungle, and after nearly leading the other children of the village into the jungle, is punished by his adopted father for trying to lead them into danger. Meanwhile, in the jungle, Shere Khan has returned to Baloo and Bagheera's part of the jungle to exact revenge on Mowgli. Baloo sneaks into the Man Village and gets Mowgli to come with him to live in the jungle; however, unbeknownst to them, Shere Khan also infiltrated the village, only to be chased off by the village people. In the ensuing chaos of the tiger's attack, Shanti and Ranjan go into the jungle to retrieve Mowgli, believing that Baloo is a hostile animal and kidnapped the boy.

Bagheera hears of Mowgli's departure from the village when the humans search the jungle for him, and immediately suspects Baloo. Mowgli instructs Baloo to scare off Shanti should she appear, and bemoans the boring life he had in the Man Village. Baloo and Mowgli journey to King Louie's old temple (King Louie is mentioned to have abandoned it), however when the animals of the jungle mock Shanti and other aspects of Mowgli's life in the Man Village, the boy leaves, offended. He runs into Shanti and Ranjan, but Baloo scares Shanti as Mowgli wanted him to. When the truth comes out that Mowgli ordered Baloo to scare her, Shanti and Ranjan run away and leave Mowgli.

Baloo recognizes that Mowgli misses his old life, but when Mowgli tries to make amends with his human friends, they are attacked by Shere Khan. The tiger chases Mowgli and Shanti to a temple built above a lake of lava, and Baloo leaves Ranjan with Bagheera while he goes to protect Mowgli. After confusing Shere Khan by banging several different gongs, Shanti's presence is revealed to Shere Khan. Baloo fights Shere Khan just as Mowgli is about to give himself up to save Shanti, but the tiger chases the two children to a statue across a pit of lava. Shere Khan is trapped within the statue's mouth, and it plummets onto a large stone that resides in the lava below. With his nemesis defeated, Mowgli returns to the Man Village with Shanti and Ranjan, but they still visit Baloo and Bagheera in the jungle regularly.

Production[]

  • In the '90s, screenwriting duo Bob Hilgenberg and Rob Muir submitted a Jungle Book 2 screenplay in which Baloo ventured to save his romantic interest from a poacher. Disney ultimately went in a different direction for the sequel.[1]
  • John Goodman recorded his voice work in New Orleans while Haley Joel Osment recorded his in California.
  • Due to a legal dispute, the character of King Louie from the original Jungle Book could not be included in this film. However, he makes a non-physical appearance as a shadow puppet in the beginning of the film and is briefly mentioned in the middle of the film.
  • The decision was made to keep Shere Khan in shadow during the beginning of the film to "reflect his 'wounded pride'".

Characters[]

Returning from the first film[]

New in this film[]

  • Lucky, voiced by Phil Collins
  • Ranjan, voiced by Connor Funk
  • Ranjan's Father, voiced by John Rhys-Davies
  • Messua, voiced by Veena Bidasha
  • Shanti's Mother, voiced by Devika Parikh

Animals featured[]

  • Human (Mowgli, Shanti, Ranjan, Ranjan's Father, Messua, Shanti's Mother & Other Villagers)
  • Sloth Bear (Baloo)
  • Black Panther (Bagheera)
  • Bengal Tiger (Shere Khan)
  • Indian Python (Kaa)
  • Asian Elephant (Colonel Hathi, Hathi Jr. & Elephant Patrol; Some seen in King Louie's former palace)
  • Indian Vulture (Buzzie, Flaps, Dizzie, Ziggy & Lucky)
  • Baboon (Flunkey)
  • Indian Rhinoceros (Seen in King Louie's former palace)
  • Parakeet (Seen in King Louie's former palace)
  • Hippopotamus (Seen in King Louie's former palace)
  • Indian Mongoose (Seen in King Louie's former palace)
  • Ocelot (Seen in King Louie's former palace)
  • Water rat (Seen in King Louie's former palace)
  • Insect (Seen in King Louie's former palace)
  • Earthworm (Seen in King Louie's former palace)
  • Crane (Seen in King Louie's former palace)
  • Cuckoo (Seen in King Louie's former palace)
  • Kookaburra (Seen in King Louie's former palace)
  • Gazelle (Seen in King Louie's former palace)
  • Langur (The Bandar-log)
  • Owl (Seen by Shanti in the jungle)
  • Vampire Bat (Seen attacking Shanti)
  • Macaque (Seen in King Louie's former palace)
  • Meerkat (Seen in King Louie's former palace)
  • Warthog (Seen in King Louie's former palace)

Hidden appearances[]

  • During one of attempts at the classic musical number The Bear Necessities from the first film, two prickly pears land on and stick to Kaa's head, making him look like Mickey Mouse. This is an example of a Hidden Mickey.
  • During W-I-L-D, Timon and Pumbaa can briefly be seen dancing until Baloo bounces them off with his backside.
  • Haley Joel Osment and Mae Whitman would later co-star again in Kingdom Hearts II, voicing Sora and Yuffie, respectively.

Soundtrack[]

The band Smash Mouth recorded a cover of the Sherman Brothers song, "I Wanna Be Like You" (originally from the 1967 musical film), which is featured on this film's soundtrack.

Reaction[]

Critical reception[]

Based on 86 reviews, the film a "rotten" approval rating of 19% on Rotten Tomatoes, with an average score of 4.4/10.[2] Another review aggregator, Metacritic, which assigns a normalized rating out of 100 top reviews from mainstream critics, the film received an average score of 38%, based on 24 reviews.[3]

Box office[]

The film grossed $47,901,582 in the United States and $87,802,017 in foreign countries adding to $135,703,599 worldwide.[4]

Gallery[]

References[]

  1. Armstrong, Josh (2012-03-05). Bob Hilgenberg and Rob Muir on the Rise and Fall of Disney's Circle 7 Animation. Animated Views. Retrieved on 2013-04-24.
  2. The Jungle Book 2 Movie Reviews, Pictures. Rotten Tomatoes. IGN Entertainment.
  3. The Jungle Book 2 (2003): Reviews. Metacritic.
  4. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named mojo

External links[]

Template:The Jungle Book

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