Jumanji | |
---|---|
Theatrical release poster |
|
Directed by | Joe Johnston |
Produced by | Robert W. Cort Ted Field Larry J. Franco |
Screenplay by | Greg Taylor Jonathan Hensleigh Jim Strain |
Based on | Jumanji by Chris Van Allsburg |
Starring | Robin Williams Bonnie Hunt Kirsten Dunst Bradley Pierce David Alan Grier Jonathan Hyde Bebe Neuwirth Adam Hann-Byrd Laura Bell Bundy |
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 |
Box office | $262,797,249 |
Jumanji is a 1995 American fantasy–comedy film about a supernatural board game that makes wild animals and other jungle hazards materialize upon each player's move. It was directed by Joe Johnston and is based on Chris Van Allsburg's popular 1981 picture book of the same name.[1] Industrial Light & Magic provided computer graphics and animatronics for the special effects.
The film stars Robin Williams as Alan, a man who emerges from the game's unseen jungle world, along with Kirsten Dunst as a girl who plays the game with her brother, David Alan Grier as a hapless shoemaker-turned-police officer, Adam Hann-Byrd as Alan when he was a boy, Bonnie Hunt as the woman who played the game with Alan when they were children, and Jonathan Hyde in a dual role as both Alan's father and a hunter intent on killing Alan. The cast also features Bradley Pierce as the girl's brother and Bebe Neuwirth as her aunt. It was shot in Keene, New Hampshire, where the story is set, North Berwick, Maine (the Parrish Shoes factory) and Vancouver, British Columbia.
Contents |
In 1869, two boys bury a chest containing something dangerous and terrifying in the woods near Brantford, New Hampshire. When one of them asks what will happen if someone digs it up, 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 flees from a gang of bullies to a shoe factory owned by his father, Sam, where he meets his friend Carl Bentley, one of Sam's employees. When Alan accidentally damages a machine and ruins a new design for a shoe, Carl accepts the blame and loses his job. Outside the factory, after the bullies steal his bicycle, Alan follows the sound of tribal drumbeats to a construction site and finds a buried chest, which contains a board game called "Jumanji".
Alan takes the game home and has an argument with Sam, who insists on sending him to a boarding school. Alan prepares to run away from home, but his friend Sarah Whittle, the lead bully's ex-girlfriend, gives his bike back. The two begin a game of Jumanji, which acts strangely: When a player rolls the dice, the player's piece moves itself and a message appears on the board. When Alan makes his first move, a vortex sucks him into an unseen jungle and he will be released when a player rolls a five or an eight, but Sarah quits the game after being attacked by African bats.
Twenty-six years later, Judy and Peter Shepherd move into the Parrish house with their aunt Nora after losing their parents in an accident. By this time, it has been rumored that Alan was murdered by his father, hacked to pieces and hidden inside the walls of the house which is now believed to be haunted. Judy and Peter hear Jumanji's drumbeats and find the game in the attic. When they begin playing, they are attacked by giant mosquitoes and crazed monkeys. The instructions say things will return to normal when someone wins, so they proceed. Peter rolls a five, releasing both a lion and Alan, who is now an adult. Alan locks the lion in a bedroom, then goes to the shoe factory, which is now shut down. On the way, he meets Carl, who works unhappily as a police officer, and discovers that the town's economy was devastated by the factory's closure. In the factory, a man reveals that Sam had abandoned the business to search for his son until his death in 1991.
When rolling the dice has no effect on the board, Alan realizes they are continuing the game he and Sarah started in 1969. The next move is Sarah's. They find Sarah at home, a reclusive outcast traumatized by the game and its aftermath. Alan tricks her into rejoining the game, and the following moves release man-eating vines from a giant flower, a hunter named Van Pelt, a stampede of rhinos, elephants and zebras, and a pelican that steals the game. Increasingly reckless havoc ensues throughout the town. Among other things, Peter turns into a monkey after trying to cheat; Peter, Sarah and Judy battle Van Pelt in a local department store; a monsoon floods the house and a crocodile attack; an earthquake breaks the house in two, Alan is sucked into the floor by quicksand, and Judy is shot in the neck by a poisonous barb from a plant. Finally, Alan wins the game just in time when Van Pelt is about to shoot him. Van Pelt and the other jungle elements are sucked back into the board.
With the game over, Alan and Sarah find themselves as children in 1969 again, but they both remember the game. Alan reconciles with his father and admits his guilt to his father for damaging the shoe. Carl gets his job back, and Sam allows Alan to attend a local school, admitting he was angry about something else at the time. Alan and Sarah throw the Jumanji board into a river where Sarah and Alan kiss before leaving.
Twenty-six years later, Alan's and Sarah's knowledge of their experiences during the game has changed the future for the better: Alan and Sarah are now happily married and Sarah is pregnant, Alan has taken over the shoe business, Carl still works there and Alan's father is still alive. When Judy, Peter, and their parents meet with Alan and Sarah at a Christmas party, they offer Judy and Peter's father a job in the shoe company and frantically discourage the parents from going on a skiing trip that would eventually lead to their deaths.
Sometime later, two French-speaking girls hear drumbeats as they walk along a beach, where the Jumanji board is half buried in the sand. This ending leaves people to believe that these girls would find the game and there will be another story.
Jumanji: Complete Motion Picture Score | |
---|---|
Film score (Digital download)/Audio CD by James Horner | |
Released | November 21, 1995 |
Length | 51:04 |
Label | Epic Soundtrax |
All music composed by James Horner.
Track listing | |||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
No. | Title | Length | |||||||
1. | "Prologue And Main TItle" | 3:42 | |||||||
2. | "First Move" | 2:20 | |||||||
3. | "Monkey Mayhem" | 4:42 | |||||||
4. | "A New World" | 2:40 | |||||||
5. | ""It's Sarah's Move"" | 2:36 | |||||||
6. | "The Hunter" | 1:56 | |||||||
7. | "Rampage Through Town" | 2:28 | |||||||
8. | "Alan Parrish" | 4:18 | |||||||
9. | "Stampede!" | 2:12 | |||||||
10. | "A Pelican Steals The Game" | 1:40 | |||||||
11. | "The Monsoon" | 4:48 | |||||||
12. | ""Jumanji"" | 11:47 | |||||||
13. | "End Titles" | 5:55 | |||||||
Total length:
|
51:04 |
Commercial songs from film, but not on soundtrack
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.[2][3] The film earned mixed reviews from critics, with review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes reporting that 47% of 30 professional critics have given the film a positive review, with a rating average of 5.6 out of 10.[4] Metacritic posts an average rating of 39%, based on 18 reviews.[5]
|
|