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Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle Pre-Release Thread

JD

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On December 22nd, Sony and Columbia will be releasing, Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle, a reboot/sequel to the 1995 film starring Robin Williams and based on the children's book by Crhis Van Allsberg.
Description:
SYNOPSIS

In the brand new adventure Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle, the tables are turned as four teenagers in detention are sucked into the world of Jumanji.

When they discover an old video game console with a game they’ve never heard of, they are immediately thrust into the game’s jungle setting, into the bodies of their avatars, played by Dwayne Johnson, Jack Black, Kevin Hart, and Karen Gillan. What they discover is that you don’t just play Jumanji–Jumanji plays you. They’ll have to go on the most dangerous adventure of their lives, or they’ll be stuck in the game forever...
In the original movie and book Jumanji was a board game, and when you played it the characters and animals were brought out into the real world. So making it a video game people get pulled into is a big change, but I really think it is a nice way to update the concept and keep from just repeating the first movie.
Cast:
Trailer:
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I have to admit, I had been pretty sure this was going to be a huge disaster, but based of this trailer it actually looks like it could be fun.
 
I'm going to have to say that this looks...okay, at best. If this were just a random movie called "Welcome to the Jungle" or something I probably would give it a little more credit, but the fact that it's Jumanji I wanna be more critical. When I think of what I liked about Jumanji in a really general sense is the fantasy and spectacle through the eyes of kids and the real becoming something unreal. Really warm-nice-feelings sort of stuff. This feels more like a generic sort of 'The Rock', Kevin Hart, and Jack Black comedy affair (which I probably will watch one out of every 10 of) and loses that charm. Yeah, they're playing kids, but really, Kevin Hart, Jack Black, and The Rock are always Kevin Hart, Jack Black, and The Rock in every movie. Also sprinkle in the generic trope of being trapped in your exact opposite's body type/personality has built-in superficial comedy in it. These movies can be fun, don't get me wrong. It's just not really 'Jumanji' and that makes me sad.

And it's also a little cringey that super-gorgeous-sexed-up-video-game-object-of-the-male-gaze Karen Gillan is also a high school girl inside.

But maybe the trailer is just played up to look like that and its actually a really complex look into the Jumanji universe and expands on the original film in ways that we can't even fathom, lol. That's always a possibility.
 
I didn't really like the trailer. I'm glad its not just a complete copy of the original, but I don't like the new premise, its pretty stupid, and even though I like most of the main cast ("main cast" meaning the ones in the Jumanji world), this looks like one of those movies they won't be putting on the resume (although it doesn't look as bad as Rock's Tooth Fairy movie).
 
I thought I read somewhere this was supposed to be a semi-sequel-reboot or something, guess not? The trailer had some moments and the cast is likeable, will probably see it, probably not in a theater.
 
Dwayne Johnson said that there will be some kind of acknowledgement of Robin Williams' character. I'm thinking the game is probably going to end up being connected to the board game, and the world they're in is the same one Alan Parrish was trapped in. I don't know where it comes from, but the wikipedia page, which is where I got the cast list, says it will feature archive footage of Robin Williams in the first one as a flashback.
 
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I thought I read somewhere this was supposed to be a semi-sequel-reboot or something, guess not? The trailer had some moments and the cast is likeable, will probably see it, probably not in a theater.
I read an interview that said they will come across Alan Parrish's encampment, and see how he lived in the Jumanji world.
 
I read an interview that said they will come across Alan Parrish's encampment, and see how he lived in the Jumanji world.

Wait, when Alan went in through the board game, his actual body was transported there and then back, as he is bearded and jungle-y back in the real world. Do the kids have avatars just because they come through a video game....to the same world? What happened to their actual bodies? Why is it different for them? Surprise news flash: Jumanji 2 makes no sense.
 
Wait, when Alan went in through the board game, his actual body was transported there and then back, as he is bearded and jungle-y back in the real world. Do the kids have avatars just because they come through a video game....to the same world? What happened to their actual bodies? Why is it different for them? Surprise news flash: Jumanji 2 makes no sense.
Different game, different rules?
 
Except that they're being taken into the same game, just through different real-world media. But that's fine, I mean it's still just Jumaji and not really grounded to begin with, but that is kinda questionable world-building from a development standpoint. Especially when doing a Williams tribute it would be nice if it weren't distracting in that sense for me.
 
Except that they're being taken into the same game, just through different real-world media. But that's fine, I mean it's still just Jumaji and not really grounded to begin with, but that is kinda questionable world-building from a development standpoint. Especially when doing a Williams tribute it would be nice if it weren't distracting in that sense for me.
It's been ages since I saw the first movie.
Did we ever see Alan in the Jumanji world as a kid?
He could have been put there into an adult avatar body of sorts. But it took years for him to return and he basically aged into the adult we see when he returned in the meantime
 
It's also been quite some time since I've seen it. This could be possible. Now, when I have a love for something I will let myself imagine these sorts of explanations (Star Trek, anyone?) But I don't really think that Jumaji 2 is being made out of love and will not be something that I love so I won't be jumping hoops to explain this discrepancy. That being said, the first movie pretty clearly intends to imply that Alan is physically transported to the jungle for many years, and then is physically transported back, given his return clothing, hair, and beard. Could his body have been in some kind of stasis in between worlds while his avatar lived in the jungle, and then he was placed back into his body that had been aging this whole time and then returned to the real world? Sure, but it feels like too much of a stretch to explain why the kids have avatars.

It'll boil down to 'this little bit doesn't make sense and is not explained, but the people who made the movie didn't care,' which isn't often an acceptable answer for me. Unless of course the movie is actually really fun and the positives outweigh the negatives.
 
Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle
My Grade: B+

I saw the original/first movie. Once. Like nearly 20 years ago when it first came out on VHS. It was okay, but I was sort of that age/mood and point where I was getting over these type of movies and Robin Williams's shtick he was stuck in when doing movies. So, I have no real connection or sentimentality to the movie. It was fine, what it is, but not sure I'd fully regard it as a "classic" that's untouchable like other properties from my childhood that've been remade/rebooted/sequeled recently.

That said, given that this movie appeared to be one of those remakes/reboots/sequels I didn't have really high expectations for this movie given how these remakes/reboots/sequels go, usually trying too hard to copy the original and, sometimes, play up some of the flaws or oddities in it in order to have some kind of comedic beat. (Though, to be fair, this tends to happen more with theatrical remake/reboots/sequel of old TV shows. ) But, as I saw more trailers and read more about the premise, I had to admit it looked interesting.

The Internet, being the Internet, of course had to make a fuss over the movie being made because, apparently, Jumanji is sacred and then set/cast photos came out showing actress Karen Gillan in short-shorts and halter top and people had to cry sexism about a movie putting an attractive woman in revealing clothing because we're not allowed to find the genders we're attracted to attractive. (Yeah, yeah, you *could* argue sexism and the illogic of the circumstance but it's still a damn movie and, sorry, we have to look at these characters for two hours so why can't they look good? The Rock wasn't exactly wearing clothing entirely appropriate for the jungle either but rather a shirt designed to show off his pecs and arms. But, sorry, I'm not going to be ashamed of finding Karen Gillan hot and welcoming her wardrobe in this movie.) People continued to harp on this even after the creators of the movie came out and said her clothing makes sense in the context of the movie and when we finally got the trailers and detailed plot info it was made clear what the circumstances were and they fit/made more sense and even with that, the movie having came out, and the movie itself pointing out the illogic of it all people still bitch. Ugh.

Anyway, neither here nor there.

The movie has four teenagers given detention for various misdeeds in school and as part of that detention they're made to clean up a storage room in their school set to be remodeled into a new computer lab (specifically, they're told to pull the staples out of several boxes of magazines set for recycling and the metallic material needs to be removed) while there they come across an old cartridge-based video game console set off to the side among other items to be donated. (We see the origins of the console at the beginning of the movie, set in 1996, and tied to the end of the original Jumaji movie) Bored, they hook up the device and decide to play the game, they're made to select their characters and when they press "Start" they game sucks them into it, placing them in the "game world" and they're now in the bodies of their chosen avatars.

Spencer is the nerdy, hypochondriac, kid afraid of squirrels and he finds himself now in the body of Dr. Smolder Bravestone (The Rock) the "leader"/"tank" of the group, a man of strength and fearlessness.

Anthony is the tall, muscular, football star/Alpha male and he finds himself now in the body of "Mouse" (Kevin Hart) the equipment carrier of the group with few to no physical attributes of note.

Bethany is the social-media, shallow and self-involved, "popular girl" of the school and she finds herself in the body of Dr. "Shelly" Oberon (Jack Black) an overweight, middle aged, man and is the brains of the group.

Martha is the "cute girl"/social outcast of the school who's unsure of herself and she finds herself as Ruby Roundhouse (Karen Gillan) a Lara Croft-like attractive female action-game trope wearing skimpy clothing and with a number of fighting skills.

The teenagers, in their avatars, find themselves against their own personalities, the scared kid is the muscle, the muscular kid, is the weak one, the popular girl is Jack Black, the shy girl is a scantly clad "man-killer" and all of the actors have fun playing against their own type as well being these teenagers. (Notably The Rock as the afraid kid and probably the most brilliant performance Jack Black has ever done playing the popular girl which he manages to do with the "grace" of it without resorting to too much... "Jack Black"-eness, so it comes across as believable.

They're initially confused on what is going on but find themselves soon collected by a "guide" who exposits on them their mission, the "villain" has acquired a sacred stone that protected the island and, as a result, the island is mad and all of the animals are now of great danger, they have to collect the stone and return it to its original location in order to win/leave the game. With this scene, and the one following it, we learn some of the interesting rules of what is happening.

First of all, the guide that collects them is unresponsive to much questioning and often repeats the same lines of dialogue as responses to their questions, Spencer figures he's an "NPC" (Non-Player-Character, only there to provide exposition and mission objectives so unable to answer any questions beyond his reason for being) when they're dropped off they also learn they each have certain abilities, and weaknesses, to their individual characters (things they can now do and use without effort) as well as each having three "lives." It's assumed that dying on their last life will lead to actual death.

It's with these various videogame tropes that the movie has most of its fun, even at one point the characters are all forced into envisioning some backstory through a "cut scene" seen from the perspective of an observer of the villain and, with this, is the reason for Gillan's inappropriate jungle wear, she's a video game character.

The movie follows a pretty predictable and formulaic story for both a movie and a video game but it manages to have fun with it with the game elements and the characters and the movie actually has a good level of "heart" to ti as you feel for the characters and want to see themselves grow and be better when they re-enter the real world. (It's suggested, all of these kids have known each other since grade school, and some where actual friends, but the dynamics of high school changed their relationships.)

The movie is fun. There's good action scenes, some sort-of decent CGI, and all of the actors do a good job in their roles (even if Hart is playing his usual Hart-self.)

The movie is fun. I sort of wish, however, it played on the various videogame tropes a bit more as they had more difficult encounters with NPCs and such. I'd say most people will likely get enjoyment out of it and it doesn't do anything to "erase" the original movie and, infact, out-right acknowledges it.
 
I just came back....I honestly liked this movie. And I liked how it had a few call-backs to the first film instead of pretending it didn't happen.
 
My mom and I tried to see it on Wednesday, but the theater we go to recently switched to chosen seating, and all of the good seats were taken. We're going to hopefully try again sometime in the next couple weeks.
 
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Saw it yesterday, it was dumb...and fun, the cast and characters were pretty solid and most of the humor worked. I'd give it a B-.
 
The chosen/luxury seating thing is pretty nice. I'll probably see a couple more movies at theaters this year because of it.
 
I saw it this morning, and I really enjoyed it. I'm a lifelong gamer, so I got a big kick out of the way they played around with video games tropes. The whole cast did a great job, and I can't really think of any jokes that didn't work for me.
I was surprised how much of a message it actually had to it, but it was a nice message and it didn't feel preachy to me.
The bit at the end where they hear the drums and all look at each other.... and then smash the game, was hilarious. It was a nice way to play around with our expectations for them to set up a sequel.
 
I quite loved it! Not only is it a fun, hilarious, and heartfelt movie, it's a worthy sequel of the original. Like others, I was concerned about the film when it was first announced, but the trailers looked promising as a presented a fun action comedy and the film lived up to my expectations based on those trailers.

The Breakfast Club-esque set-up, complete with a brain, an athlete, a princess, and a basket case, was a nice touch as is their avatars being polar opposites from their character types. Playing against types is a big part of the film and I loved how it often subverted action film and video game tropes, both for humor and for the betterment of the film.

The whole cast is great in playing against their cast type, but Jack Black particularly relished the opportunity in playing an insipid, shallow, self-absorbed teenage girl. I especially loved the sight of him teaching Karen Gillan how to flirt at men. :lol:

A nice callback to the original with Alex living in the board for twenty years, but returning to a child upon completing the game and reseting his timeline, while everyone recalls the experience.

I like to think Robin Williams would love this film. Plus, I loved the tribute to Alan Parsons, giving us a small idea of what his life was like trapped inside the game.
 
Yeah, the Alan Parsons reference was nice. I knew there was one somewhere, but not what it was so it was still a bit of a surprise when it happened.
 
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