Jumanji (film)
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Jumanji | |
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Directed by | Joe Johnston |
Produced by | Robert W. Cort, Ted Field, Larry J. Franco |
Written by | Chris Van Allsburg, Greg Taylor, Jonathan Hensleigh (screenplay) |
Starring | Robin Williams, Jonathan Hyde, Kirsten Dunst, Bonnie Hunt, Bradley Pierce, Bebe Neuwirth, David Alan Grier, Adam Hann-Byrd, Patricia Clarkson |
Music by | James Horner |
Cinematography | Thomas Ackerman |
Editing by | Robert Dalva |
Distributed by | TriStar Pictures |
Release date(s) | December 15, 1995 |
Running time | 104 minutes |
Language | English |
Budget | ~$65,000,000 |
IMDb profile |
Jumanji is a 1995 feature film directed by Joe Johnston and based on Chris Van Allsburg's popular 1981 book, Jumanji. 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 movie starred Robin Williams, Kirsten Dunst, Bradley Pierce, and Bonnie Hunt. It is dedicated to the memory of Stephen L. Price.
Contents |
[edit] Plot
The plot summary in this article or section is too long or detailed compared to the rest of the article. Please edit the article to focus on discussing the work rather than merely reiterating the plot. |
In 1869, two brothers, Caleb and Benjamin, go into the woods, start digging, and bury a box. Benjamin asks what would happen if someone found it. Caleb replies, "May God have mercy on his soul.". 100 years later, a 12-year-old boy named Alan Parrish is drawn to a strange sound of drumbeats outside his father's shoe factory in a construction site, which lead him to a locked trunk containing a mysterious board game within, called Jumanji.
That night he and his friend Sarah Whittle play the Jumanji game. The instructions read:
"Jumanji.
A game for those who seek to find
a way to leave their world behind.
You roll the dice to move your token,
doubles get another turn.
The first player to reach the end wins."
The tokens move by themselves and writing appears in the black sphere in the game's centre. She reads the riddle ("At night they fly, you'd better run. These winged things are not much fun") and strange squeaking comes from the fireplace. In an attempt to put the game away, Alan accidentally dropped the dice on the board,, and his piece moves causing Alan to reply, "Oh no. The game thinks I rolled." Alan's riddle reads: "In the jungle you must wait till the dice read five or eight". Before Sarah's eyes, Alan disappeared, literally sucked into the game and she is chased out of the house screaming, scared out of her wits, by a flock of bats that flew out of the fireplace.
Twenty-six years later a pair of siblings, Judy and Peter Shepherd (Kirsten Dunst and Bradley Pierce), move into the old Parrish estate with their Aunt Nora. Judy and Peter's parents died in a car crash in Canada some time earlier. Ever since, Judy has become a pathological liar and Peter refuses to speak except when he and Judy are alone. While moving their stuff in, Peter enters the attic and is frightened by the bat from the game. The two children start to hear familiar drumbeats from upstairs. The following morning the two children are lured to the attic by the strange drum beats where they discover Jumanji. Curious about the game, they set it up and read the rules. Peter is about to place two tokens on the board when they unexpectedly leap from his hand and fuse themselves onto the game. Peter allows Judy to go first.
The two watch in amazement as her token moves by itself and orange writing appears in the center of the game. After she reads the riddle, ("A tiny bite can make you itch, make you sneeze, make you twitch") three giant mosquitoes fly in and Judy scares them off with a tennis racket. Peter rolls the dice, getting snake eyes. After reading the riddle ("This will not be an easy mission, monkeys slow the expedition"), loud noises come from downstairs and they find a group of menacing monkeys in the kitchen, which later run out into the neighborhood. Judy then spots another notice written on the side of the game board reading:
"ADVENTURERS BEWARE.
DO NOT BEGIN UNLESS YOU INTEND TO FINISH.
FOR THE EXCITING CONSEQUENCES WILL ONLY VANISH
WHEN A PLAYER HAS REACHED JUMANJI AND CALLS OUT ITS NAME."
Judy reminds Peter that he rolled doubles, so he must roll again. Peter rolls a five, and a lion ("His fangs are sharp, he likes your taste. Your party better move, poste haste") emerges from the shadows. It chases the two downstairs, where they are saved by a bearded man dressed in leaves who traps the lion in Aunt Nora's bedroom.
Finding the man in a locked room, it dawns on the children that he is Alan Parrish (now 38 years old - and played by Robin Williams). He runs out after learning his house has been abandoned for years. He runs out into the street and is nearly run over by a police car, driven by none other than Carl (someone he wronged as a child). Carl is puzzled by Alan's physique and behavior, making Judy come up with a story of him being her "vegetarian uncle". Carl then has to run off when monkeys hijack his car (a running gag as his car is slowly dismantled). Alan runs to his father's factory and learns that his father gave up on life when he believed his son had run away. Alan is directed by the man to the Parrish gravestone where he learns they died just four years before. Judy tells Alan their parents died as well, however she also immeditaly begins to make up another story, prompting Peter to break his silence in front of Alan. Judy asks if Alan can help them finish the game, but he refuses. The trio then witness a car crash and they discover that the driver of the car was bitten by one of the giant mosquitoes. As a pair of paramedics load her into the ambulance, Alan, Peter, and Judy get into the car where they are attacked by another mosquito. Alan starts up the car and, in a comedic scene, drives the car back to his house.
Alan locks himself in the bathroom to sort himself out and he emerges with cut hair, cleanshaven, and dressed in new clothes. Alan wishes to start off with his life again. Peter accuses Alan of being afraid, but Alan speaks to him coldly about what things there are in the game. Alan agrees to watch them play the game. Later in the lounge, Judy cannot take her turn and Alan realizes he must play, but it is not his turn; it is Sarah Wittle's turn.
They find Sarah (Bonnie Hunt) at her old house and she faints in shock when Alan reveals who he is. They take her back to the Parrish estate where they learn she has been in therapy for years, trying to get over her experience of Alan being sucked into Jumanji as well as the resulting social isolation of being known as "the person who saw Alan Parrish die". Sarah is extremely frightened when she sees Jumanji and Alan tries to reassure her that nothing will go wrong. It is Sarah's turn, but she can't bear to do it. Alan offers her a hand to put the dice in so she can go home, but he turns his hand when she drops the dice, allowing the dice to fall onto the board as her roll. After the next riddle appears ("They grow much faster than bamboo. Take care, or they'll come after you"), the lounge is suddenly overgrown with vines and plants from the game. A giant yellow plant known as a "pod" rips its way through the fireplace and tries to eat Peter. Alan saves Peter using a sword on display above the mantle. Carl, meanwhile, finds his car crashed into a tree. He then heads off to arrest Alan.
Back at the house, Alan traps the plants in the lounge and guides a frightened Sarah into the library. Alan and Sarah have a heart-to-heart moment about how the game ruined their lives. The four reluctantly agree to finish the game. Alan rolls, but leaps up in fright when he reads the inscription: "A hunter from the darkest wild, makes you feel just like a child".
A gun goes off and Van Pelt, a hunter armed with a rifle, appears and chases Alan out of the house. Carl appears and tries to arrest Van Pelt, only to have his car shot at multiple times. Alan gets away and returns to the house, while Van Pelt runs out of ammunition and goes in search of a new supply of bullets. At the house, Sarah is told Alan didn't want to play and the two get into an argument. Alan also reveals Van Pelt wants to kill him because he finds everything offensive about him. The two get into a heated argument, but they stop when the ground shudders underneath them. Judy has rolled the dice and books start falling from the bookshelves. Alan turns and informs the others that a stampede is on its way (Judy rolled this clue: "Don't be fooled. It isn't thunder. Staying put would be a blunder"). Alan grabs the game and heads for the hills as a stampede of rhinoceroses, elephants, zebras, and pelicans charges through the house. One pelican lands and steals the game. The group give chase, oblivious that the plants are spreading further throughout — and out of — the house.
Van Pelt goes into a gun shop and is able to replace his elephant gun with a modern automatic rifle. Peter saves the game from the pelican when it accidentally drops it in a river. Carl finds the group soon after and arrests Alan. Realizing that Van Pelt is hidden somewhere nearby and looking for an opening to shoot him, Alan lets Carl drive him away from the others. After this, Judy and Sarah discover Peter has tried to cheat the game. He was only 10 spaces away, so he tried to drop the dice so they would land on 12, but he only got a six. As a punishment for cheating, the game transforms him into a monkey (his clue was the cheating penalty: "A law of Jumanji having been broken. You will slip back even more than your token").
Alan reveals to Carl who he is, causing the police car to screech to a halt. Jumanji has also had several effects on the town. The mosquitoes have hospitalized nearly 100 people, the monkeys have hijacked several cars and caused storefront damage, and the stampede has plowed its way through town. All of this has led to widespread looting. Van Pelt steals Jumanji and Peter is nearly crushed by the raging stampede of animals while hiding in a car after he regains the game, but Van Pelt manages to find him and take it back. In a discount store, Van Pelt captures Sarah, but Peter and Judy save her and they run off with the game. Van Pelt chases them about in the shop. Carl releases Alan, but Alan handcuffs him to the car door to keep him away from the danger. After hearing of Sarah's predicament, Alan and Carl drive off to save her, Alan driving badly. Although Van Pelt is caught in a trap set by Peter, he recovers and buries the trio in a pile of tires.
Alan and Carl have broken the brakes on the car and smash their way through the shop, causing a stand of paint cans to collapse on Van Pelt. Alan sees Peter's current form and becomes unhappy.
Meanwhile, Aunt Nora is returning home in her car. She hears news of the mosquito bites' effects on people and sees the stampede go by. A monkey attacks her in her car, causing her to crash it. Alan scolds Peter, but he then apologizes when he sees the young child-monkey cry. Peter then explains he is not crying for being scolded, but due to his predicament of growing a tail. Carl sets off from the store to track down Alan. At the house, Alan and others discover that the plants in the lounge have freed themselves and have turned the house into a jungle. Carl finds Nora on the road, but before he can drive her home, a plant attacks and devours his car.
At the house, Sarah rolls and creates a monsoon ("Every month at the quarter moon, there will be a monsoon in your lagoon"). Things take a turn for the worse when the lower areas of the house are flooded, and a crocodile attempts to eat the group. Sarah is nearly caught in the crocodile's jaws, forcing Alan to pounce and wrestle the crocodile to save her. Outside, Carl and Nora arrive, and Carl tries to kick the doors in, but all the water blasts out of the house and sweeps him and Nora away, taking the crocodile with them. The group goes to finish the game in the attic. Alan rolls, but the riddle summons quicksand (Beware the ground on which you stand, the floor is quicker than the sand) and he begins quickly sinking into the floor. Thinking quickly, Judy rolls for her turn and is advised to go back one space (There is a lesson you will learn: sometimes you must go back a turn), freezing the floor and trapping Alan and Sarah. Peter rolls the dice and the group are surrounded by giant spiders ("Need a hand? Well, you just wait. We'll help you out, we each have 8"). Alan tells Peter to get an axe that is in the woodshed to fight the spiders. Peter gets to the woodshed and sees it locked. Trying to get in, he then grabs the axe by the woodshed door to get it open. Peter then breaks the fourth wall by looking into the camera realizing that he was trying to open the door with the axe. Peter battles the spiders using an axe, but Judy collapses after being poisoned by a jungle plant.
Sarah rolls using her mouth and an earthquake occurs ("You're almost there with much at stake, but now the ground begins to quake"). Alan gets free, finds the game, and notices that he can finish if he rolls a three. Yet before he can do so, Van Pelt appears, covered in paint. He prepares to shoot Alan and tells him to stand up and to drop what he's holding (the dice), impressed that he is finally acting like a man. The first dice lands on the board, a one. The other die falls through a crack in the floor. Just as it's about to tumble over the edge, it stops, a two. When Van Pelt asks Alan for his last words, Alan notices he has dropped the dice and looks on in joy as his counter moves in the center of the game, and he quietly says "Jumanji.": Van Pelt fires and Sarah runs in front of Alan to save him, but the bullet is sucked away into the game and his gun is sucked back to the shop. Suddenly, everything that came out of the game flies in and forms a giant tornado of colors as they, along with Van Pelt, are sucked back into the game.
The game has ended, but Alan and Sarah are now children, back in 1969, with the knowledge what they did growing up. Judy and Peter aren't born yet. Alan and Samuel make up and Alan confesses to leaving the shoe in the shredder, but his father must dash off as he is the guest of honor at his meeting. Alan and Sarah decide to dump Jumanji in the nearby river, free of it at last. Sarah kisses Alan and the two walk off.
Twenty six years on, at the Parrish home, the two are now adults and are married with Sarah pregnant. They are celebrating Christmas with family and friends (including Carl). Alan is speaking to his dad on the phone, but he and Sarah have to dash off to meet some new friends: Jim (who has been hired by Alan and Sarah to work on the advertising for Parrish shoes) and Martha. The two are in fact Judy and Peter's parents. The two meet Judy and Peter (again) and offer them presents. Jim informs the two that they might be going on a skiing trip to Canada, but Alan and Sarah shout "NO!" in horror, knowing that they would die in the car crash there. The two say that they would think it would be best for Jim to start on his work as soon as possible and everyone agrees, which spares Judy and Peter's parents.
Meanwhile, on a beach somewhere, a pair of French speaking children walk and they hear some strange drums beating. Not far from them in the sand is the game...
[edit] Cast
- Robin Williams as Alan Parrish
- Jonathan Hyde as Samuel Alan Parrish / Van Pelt
- Kirsten Dunst as Judy Shepherd
- Bradley Pierce as Peter Shepherd
- Bonnie Hunt as Sarah Whittle
- Bebe Neuwirth as Nora Shepherd
- David Alan Grier as Carl Bentley
- Adam Hann-Byrd as Young Alan Parrish
- Laura Bell Bundy as Young Sarah Whittle
[edit] Miscellaneous
- Van Pelt and Alan's father are both portrayed by Jonathan Hyde, which is reminiscent of stage and screen adaptations of Peter Pan, where the character of the father and Captain Hook are also traditionally played by the same actor. Also, Robin Williams played a grown-up Peter in the movie Hook based on the Peter Pan novel.
- Interiors were filmed on a large sound stage in Vancouver, British Columbia. Exteriors were shot both at North Berwick, Maine, where the historic 1862 North Berwick Company woolen mill serves as the setting for the Parrish Shoe factory, and at Keene, New Hampshire, where Main Street serves as the downtown of fictional Brantford. The side of a corner building in Keene retains a painted sign, originally created as part of the movie's background decoration, advertising Parrish Shoes.
- David Alan Grier, who plays Carl, and Bonnie Hunt, who played Sarah, went on to later star in Bonnie Hunt's film Return to Me and her ABC sitcom, Life With Bonnie.
- The "Sir-Save-A-Lot" store was the old Super-Valu store located in Tsawwassen, BC at 56th Street and 12th Avenue. After Super-Valu closed, it became a Bargain World. The site has since been redeveloped to house a Safeway and mini-mall.
- The music playing when Van Pelt enters the store to buy a new rifle and ammo is the Mexican national anthem, and it was eliminated from the film's soundtrack when this movie played in Mexico.
[edit] Spin-offs
- There was an animated series based on the movie 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 movie's plot, there were a few changes such as the exclusion of Bonnie Hunt's character, and the age and relationship of the David Alan Grier character was changed somewhat. 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.
- Milton Bradley released a board game that was equipped with not only the game clues from the movie, 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 loosely based on a book of the same name.
[edit] Game Clues
Here are the known Jumanji game clues that are in the movie and/or the board game (with the description of what each one is).
[edit] Movie Clues
Besides the movie, these clues also appear in the board game:
- At night they fly, you better run. These winged things are not much fun. - Clue for a flock of bats.
- In the jungle you must wait 'till the dice read five or eight. - Instead of creating something like the other clues, the board absorbs whoever rolled the dice into Jumanji until a 5 or 8 is rolled. Only a circle says this in the board game.
- A tiny bite can make you itch, make you sneeze, make you twitch. - Clue for a swarm of large mosquitos.
- This will not be an easy mission. Monkeys slow the expedition. - Clue for the monkeys.
- His fangs are sharp. He likes your taste. Your party better move, poste haste. - Clue for a lion.
- They grow much faster than bamboo. Take care or they'll come after you. - Clue for (flowering) crawling vines. In the board game, the man-eating plant and the barb-shooting plants don't come with this.
- A hunter from the darkest wild...makes you feel just like a child. - Clue for the hunter Van Pelt.
- Don't be fooled, it isn't thunder. Staying put would be a blunder. - Clue for a stampede. In the board game, it was just rhinos.
- A law of Jumanji having been broken, you will slip back even more than your token. - Clue to Peter de-evolving into a monkey.
- Every month at the quarter moon, there'll be a monsoon in your lagoon. - Clue for a monsoon. In the board game, the crocodile doesn't come with this.
- Beware the ground on which you stand. The floor is quicker than the sand. - Clue for quicksand (game board says "You better watch just where you stand. The floor is quicker than the sand.")
- Need a hand? Well, you just wait. We'll help you out, we each have eight. - Clue for large spiders.
- You're almost there with much at stake. But now the ground begins to quake. - Clue for an earthquake.
[edit] Board Game Clues
These clues were created for the board game:
- Their boisterous laughing does provoke. In this adventure, they tell no joke. - Clue for hyenas.
- Don't stop the game you'll realize...Or one of you may vaporize. - Clue for vaporization.
- Splintered rafters all around. Duck them or they'll pin you down. - Clue for falling wood.
- With six-foot wingspan, sound of swish. It thinks the gameboard is a fish. - This is the pelican's clue.
- Enormous and yellow these flowers grew. Their flesh-eating blossoms are hungry for you. - This is the man-eating plant's clue.
- Raging waters ebb and flow. Beware piranhas down below. - Clue for piranhas.
- Feline spots in the jungle blend. Be cautious of her, she's not your friend. - Clue for a leopard.
- Elephants charging! You must confess...A freight train's damage would be far less. - This is the elephant's clue.
- Like a great white shark down the Nile. Beware the 25-foot crocodile. - This is the crocodile's clue.
- They march and eat and march and eat. If I were you, I'd watch my feet. - Clue for army ants.
- Raging and howling, a gale throws its might. Hold on for dear life or be blown out o'sight. - Clue for a tornado.
- Big as fists these balls of ice. Through umbrellas they will slice. - Clue for large hail.
- An angry sky hurls bolts of light. If you can't take cover, you'd better take flight. - Clue for thunderbolts.
- When you see it, you will shake. It's big and green and rhymes with lake. - Clue for a snake.
- Crawling and slithering up from the flood. Come thousands of leeches to suck your blood. - Clue for leeches.
- Jungle plague germs, there's a medley. You can't see them, but they're deadly. - Clue for plague germs.
- Hush now! Just listen, no complaints, no more gripes. The power belong to the beasts with the stripes. - This is the zebras' clue.
- A cavernous yawn with tusks of course. Be sure to skirt this river horse. - Clue for a hippopotamus.
- These purple lovelies you'd want to grow...If it weren't for the poison barbs they throw. - This is the barb-shooting plants' clue.
[edit] Box office
US Gross Domestic Takings: US$ 100,475,249
Other International Takings: $162,322,000
Gross Worldwide Takings: $262,797,249 [1]
[edit] See also
[edit] References
[edit] External links
- Jumanji at the Internet Movie Database
- Jumanji at Box Office Mojo