The Jungle Book is a 1967 American animated film produced by
Walt Disney Productions. Inspired by Rudyard Kipling's book of the same name,
it is the 19th animated feature in the Walt Disney Animated Classics series
.
Directed by Wolfgang Reitherman, it was the last film to be produced by Walt
Disney, who died during its production. The plot follows Mowgli, a feral child
raised in the Indian jungle by wolves, as his friends Bagheera the panther and
Baloo the bear try to convince him into leaving the jungle before the evil
tiger Shere Khan arrives.
The early versions of both the screenplay and the soundtrack
followed Kipling's work more closely, with a dramatic, dark, and sinister tone
which Disney did not want in his family film, leading to writer Bill Peet and
composer Terry Gilkyson being replaced. The casting employed famous actors and
musicians Phil Harris, Sebastian Cabot, George Sanders and Louis Prima, as well
as Disney regulars such as Sterling Holloway, J. Pat O'Malley and Verna Felton,
and the director's son, Bruce Reitherman, as Mowgli.
The Jungle Book was released on October 18, 1967, to
positive reception, with acclaim for its soundtrack, featuring five songs by
the Sherman Brothers and one by Gilkyson, "The Bare Necessities". The
film grossed over $73 million in the United States in its first release, and as
much again from two re-releases. Disney released a live-action remake in 1994
and a theatrical sequel, The Jungle Book 2, in 2003; another live-action
adaptation is set for release in 2016.
Mowgli, a young orphan boy, is found in a basket in the deep
jungles of India by Bagheera, a black panther who promptly takes him to a
mother wolf who has just had cubs. She raises him along with her own cubs and
Mowgli soon becomes well acquainted with jungle life. Mowgli is shown ten years
later, playing with his wolf siblings.
One night, when the wolf tribe learns that Shere Khan, a
man-eating Bengal tiger, has returned to the jungle, they realize that Mowgli
must be taken to the "Man-Village" for his own safety. Bagheera
volunteers to escort him back. They leave that very night, but Mowgli is
determined to stay in the jungle. He and Bagheera rest in a tree for the night,
where Kaa, a hungry python, tries to devour Mowgli, but Bagheera intervenes.
The next morning, Mowgli tries to join the elephant patrol led by Colonel Hathi
and his wife Winifred. Bagheera finds Mowgli, but after a fight decides to
leave Mowgli on his own. Mowgli soon meets up with the laid-back, fun-loving
bear Baloo, who promises to raise Mowgli himself and never take him back to the
Man-Village.
Shortly afterwards, a group of monkeys kidnap Mowgli and
take him to their leader, King Louie the orangutan. King Louie offers to help
Mowgli stay in the jungle if he will tell Louie how to make fire like other
humans. However, since he was not raised by humans, Mowgli does not know how to
make fire. Bagheera and Baloo arrive to rescue Mowgli and in the ensuing chaos,
King Louie's palace is demolished to rubble. Bagheera speaks to Baloo that
night and convinces him that the jungle will never be safe for Mowgli so long
as Shere Khan is there. In the morning, Baloo reluctantly explains to Mowgli
that the Man-Village is best for the boy, but Mowgli accuses him of breaking
his promise and runs away. As Baloo sets off in search of Mowgli, Bagheera
rallies the help of Hathi and his patrol. However, Shere Khan himself, who was
eavesdropping on Bagheera and Hathi's conversation, is now determined to hunt
and kill Mowgli himself.
Meanwhile, Mowgli has encountered Kaa once again, but thanks
to the unwitting intervention of the suspicious Shere Khan, Mowgli escapes. As
a storm gathers, a depressed Mowgli encounters a group of friendly vultures who
accept Mowgli as a fellow outcast. Shere Khan appears shortly after, scaring
off the vultures and confronting Mowgli. Baloo rushes to the rescue and tries
to keep Shere Khan away from Mowgli, but is injured. When lightning strikes a
nearby tree and sets it ablaze, the vultures swoop in to distract Shere Khan
while Mowgli gathers flaming branches and ties them to Shere Khan's tail.
Terrified of fire, the tiger panics and runs off.
Bagheera and Baloo take Mowgli to the edge of the
Man-Village, but Mowgli is still hesitant to go there. His mind soon changes
when he is smitten by a beautiful young girl from the village who is coming
down by the riverside to fetch water. After noticing Mowgli, she
"accidentally" drops her water pot. Mowgli retrieves it for her and
follows her into the Man-Village. After Mowgli chooses to stay in the
Man-Village, Baloo and Bagheera decide to head home, content that Mowgli is
safe and happy with his own kind.
After The Sword in the Stone was released, storyman Bill
Peet claimed to Walt Disney that "we [the animation department] can do
more interesting animal characters" and suggested that Rudyard Kipling's
The Jungle Book could be used for the studio's next film. Disney agreed and
Peet created an original treatment, with little supervision, as he had done
with One Hundred and One Dalmatians and The Sword in the Stone. However, after
the disappointing reaction to The Sword in the Stone, Walt Disney decided to
become more involved in the story than he had been with the past two films,[8]
with his nephew Roy E. Disney saying that "[he] certainly influenced
everything about it. (...) With Jungle Book, he obviously got hooked on the
jungle and the characters that lived there."
Peet decided to follow closely the dramatic, dark, and
sinister tone of Kipling's book, which is about the struggles between animals
and man. However, the film's writers decided to make the story more
straightforward, as the novel is very episodic, with Mowgli going back and
forth from the jungle to the Man-Village, and Peet felt that Mowgli returning
to the Man-Village should be the ending for the film. Following suggestions,
Peet also created two original characters: The human girl for which Mowgli
falls in love, as the animators considered that falling in love would be the best
excuse for Mowgli to leave the jungle; and Louie, king of the monkeys. Louie
was a less comical character, enslaving Mowgli trying to get the boy to teach
him to make fire. The orangutan would also show a plot point borrowed from The
Second Jungle Book, gold and jewels under his ruins - after Mowgli got to the
man village, a poacher would drag the boy back to the ruins in search for the
treasure.Disney was not pleased with how the story was turning out, as he felt
it was too dark for family viewing and insisted on script changes. Peet
refused, and after a long argument, Peet left the Disney studio in January
1964.
Disney then assigned Larry Clemmons as his new writer and
one of the four story men for the film, giving Clemmons a copy of Kipling's
book, and telling him: "The first thing I want you to do is not to read
it."Clemmons still looked at the novel, and thought it was too disjointed
and without continuity, needing adaptations to fit a film script. Clemmons
wanted to start in medias res, with some flashbacks afterwards, but then Disney
said to focus on doing the storyline more straight - "Let's do the meat of
the picture. Let's establish the characters. Let's have fun with it.".
Although much of Bill Peet's work was discarded, the personalities of the
characters remained in the final film. This was because Disney felt that the
story should be kept simple, and the characters should drive the story. Disney
took an active role in the story meetings, acting out each role and helping to explore
the emotions of the characters, help create gags and develop emotional
sequences. Clemmons would write a rough script with an outline for most
sequences. The story artists then discussed how to fill the scenes, including
the comedic gags to employ. The script also tried to incorporate how the voice
actors molded their characters and interacted with each other.
The instrumental music was written by George Bruns and
orchestrated by Walter Sheets. Two of the cues were reused from previous Disney
films. The scene where Mowgli wakes up after escaping King Louie used one of
Bruns' themes for Sleeping Beauty; and the scene where Bagheera gives a eulogy
to Baloo when he mistakenly thinks the bear was killed by Shere Khan used Paul
J. Smith's organ score from Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs.
The score features eight original songs: seven by the
Sherman Brothers and one by Terry Gilkyson. Longtime Disney collaborator
Gilkyson was the first songwriter to bring several complete songs which
followed the book closely but Walt Disney felt that his efforts were too dark.
The only piece of Gilkyson's work which survived to the final film was his
upbeat tune "The Bare Necessities", which was liked by the rest of
the film crew. The Sherman Brothers were then brought in to do a complete
rewrite. Disney asked the siblings if they had read Kipling's book and they
replied that they had done so "a long, long time ago" and that they
had also seen the 1942 version by Alexander Korda. Disney said the "nice,
mysterious, heavy stuff" from both works was not what he aimed for,
instead going for a "lightness, a Disney touch". Disney frequently
brought the composers to the storyline sessions. He asked them to "find
scary places and write fun songs" for their composition that fit in with
the story and advanced the plot instead of being interruptive.
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