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  • 5 Reasons Why ‘Jungle Book’ Roared to the Top of the Box Office

    It wasn’t a big surprise that Disney’s new live-action “The Jungle Bookopened at No. 1 this weekend. What was a shocker, however, was just how big the latest version of Rudyard Kipling’s tale turned out to be.

    Going into the weekend, positive buzz for the film led to predictions that it would open to at least $70 million, $85 million on the high-end of expectations. On Sunday, however, Disney estimated that the film’s opening weekend had grossed $103.6 million. That makes it the second-biggest April opening ever, beating the $95.0 million earned by “Captain America: The Winter Soldier” two years ago, and second only to last year’s “Furious 7,” at $147.2 million. It’s also the biggest April opening ever for a PG-rated movie.

    How did “Jungle Book” over-perform so much this weekend? Here are five ways.

    1. Marketing
    By now, Disney has mastered the art of turning its beloved animated classics into live-action reboots. But there’s more than brand recognition at work here. Disney’s marketers — and director Jon Favreau — made a point of playing up the state-of-the-art CG that allowed the filmmakers to simulate a jungle in a Los Angeles warehouse and populate it with photorealistic animals. The trailers audiences saw, and the advance stories they read, promised not just a kiddie adventure with talking animals, but also an immersive experience in a lush, exotic world on the level of “Avatar.”

    2. 3D and IMAX
    As a result, this marked the rare film that viewers felt merited the surcharges they’d have to pay to see it in an enhanced format. It helped that 75 percent of North American theaters showing “Jungle Book” screened it in 3D. A healthy 43 percent of the movie’s opening-weekend sales came from 3D tickets. It was also playing on 376 IMAX screens, good for $10.4 million, amounting to 10 percent of the total gross, and scoring another April record for a Disney feature.

    And there were 463 Premium Large Format screens, for those willing to pay extra to see “Jungle Book” on a giant screen that’s not quite as eye-filling as IMAX. You could also see the film in D-Box, where your theater seat lurches in response to the on-screen action. Surcharges for those tickets can be as much as $8, meaning Disney was ensured to mint money on this film wherever people saw it.

    3. Timing
    Remember when the summer movie season began on Memorial Day? No? Remember when it began on May 1? Well, now, thanks to hits like “Winter Soldier,” “Furious 7,” and now, “Jungle Book,” summer seemingly begins just after spring break. Or it will within a couple of years. For now, however, April is still clear enough of blockbusters that a movie like “Jungle Book” can pretty much have the month to itself.

    4. Weak Competition
    This weekend’s crop of new releases posed no real threat to “Jungle Book’s” box office reign. Neither of this weekend’s other two new wide releases opened on more than 2,700 screens, compared to 4,028 for “Jungle Book.” “Barbershop: The Next Cut,” a sequel in a comedy franchise whose last installment came out 12 years ago, debuted in second place with an estimated $20.2 million. That’s below expectations and also shy of the $24.2 million opening weekend for 2004’s “Barbershop 2: Back in Business.” (“Cut” came in with less than the opening weekend of the original film.)

    As for Kevin Costner‘s new thriller, “Criminal,” no one expected it to do more than about $8 million, but it fell short with $5.9 million. It didn’t even make the top five. Opening in sixth place, it is Costner’s lowest premiere weekend since since 2005’s “Rumor Has It.”

    5. Four-quadrant Audience Appeal
    One potential weakness in “Jungle Book” — had Disney stayed close to the 1967 cartoon — is that it’s an awfully male-oriented story, with no female characters of any significance, or even speaking parts. Favreau and his team changed that by making one male character (the python Kaa) female and boosting the role of another (Mowgli’s wolf mother, Raksha.) Scarlett Johansson voices Kaa (above), and Oscar-winner Lupita Nyong’o voices Raksha. Making the movie more inclusive seems to have paid off at the box office, since Disney exit polling showed that 51 percent of the viewers were female.

    Favreau and his team also made sure the movie appealed to more than just kids. Celebrity voices (including Bill Murray and Chistopher Walken), an air of real danger in Mowgli’s confrontations with predators, and nostalgic shout-outs to the original cartoon (including such songs as “Bare Necessities” and “I Wan’na Be Like You”) all helped to draw grown-up viewers. According to Disney, some 43 percent of ticketbuyers were adults seeing the movie on their own.

    Of course, what ultimately sold the movie was its execution. Critics raved, giving “Jungle Book” a 95 percent fresh rating at Rotten Tomatoes. Audiences loved it just as much, judging by the A CinemaScore, indicating very positive word-of-mouth. So: a good movie will draw audiences of all ages and both sexes off their couches and into the theaters — and even inspire them to pay extra for an enhanced viewing experience. Who knew?

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  • Michael Keaton May Be the Villain in ‘Spider-Man: Homecoming’

    US-OSCARS-ARRIVALSBatman. Birdman. Vulture? According to Variety, Michael Keaton is in early talks to play the villain in the Sony/Marvel movie “Spider-Man: Homecoming.”

    Tom Holland is starring as Peter Parker/Spider-Man, after making his debut in “Captain America: Civil War.” Marisa Tomei plays Aunt May, and Zendaya has a mystery role.

    It’s not confirmed that Keaton will play a villain, and it’s possible there will be more than one villain no matter who is cast. Just the day before this report, Collider posted the rumor that the comics character Vulture would make an appearance, whether as the main villain or not. As they put it after the Keaton report came out:

    “But boy is it hard to look at Keaton and NOT think of Vulture, an older comics character by the name of Adrian Toomes, whose career as an electronics engineer gives way to a flight harness that gives him superhuman strength.”

    It’s not a bad idea to consider Keaton for the role, and not just because it’s interesting to think of him transitioning from DC hero to Marvel villain. He’s also on a streak, appearing in the last two films to win the Oscar for Best Picture: “Birdman” and “Spotlight.” Spidey probably won’t take home Best Picture, but it wouldn’t hurt to cast a good luck charm.

    “Spider-Man: Homecoming” opens in theaters on July 7, 2017.

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  • Robert Downey Jr. on Spider-Man’s ‘Hot Aunt,’ Nervous Chris Evans, His Iron Baby Girl

    US-ENTERTAINMENT-DISNEYConsidering Jimmy Kimmel just asked , “Is there any chance you would adopt me?” it may be safe to say he’s Team Iron Man in “Captain America: Civil War.” Jimmy had Team Cap on his show the other night, and welcomed Team Iron Man on Wednesday. That meant Don Cheadle, Paul Bettany, and Emily VanCamp all sat with RDJ, who was the star of the show.

    The cast just watched the movie together at the big Hollywood premiere, and RDJ said , aka Cap, was a total stress case about it:

    “All I know is, Chris Evans is such a nervous nelly. He gets all — I mean, he plays a real butch guy in the movie. I love Captain America — I hate to say it, I’m not supposed to say it, I love Chris, I love Captain America. Before the premiere, he’s all nervous. We’re supposed to drive in the Audis. He’s like ‘Bro, I don’t know, should you go first, should I go first?’ I was like ‘Man up, we’ve got to go to this premiere together!’”

    Poor Chris. Apparently Evans brought, or at least invited, New England Patriots players to the premiere. And if you saw his JKL clip from earlier this week, you know he’s basically in love with Tom Brady. You can watch or re-watch that clip below, with the others.

    Downey also talked abut the new Spider-Man, played by Tom Holland, whom he called “fantastic.” Jimmy has already seen “Civil War” (out for the rest of us on May 6) and noted that Peter Parker’s Aunt May just seems to keep getting younger, and now she’s played by Marisa Tomei. “He’s got like a hot aunt,” RDJ said, then turned to look straight into the camera. “My god, just think of the possibilities.” Down, Tony! Pepper would not approve!

    In that same video, they showed a photo of RDJ’s daughter, Avri Roel, wearing his Iron Man glove. He said he gave her a choice between the shield and the gauntlet and she naturally went for Team Iron Man. Jimmy said he has an “iron baby,” and she’s so cute.

    Watch all of the videos:

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  • The Rock Welcomes Charlize Theron to ‘Fast & Furious 8’

    Premiere Of Universal Pictures' "The Huntsman: Winter's War" - Red CarpetThings are getting “Fast and Furiosa”!

    On the heels of reports that Charlize Theron was joining the cast of “Fast 8,” franchise star Dwayne Johnson made the news official with a post on Instagram. The Rock welcomed his “good bud and all around bad ass” — no stranger to racing in cars after “Mad Max: Fury Road” — to the “Furious” family by saying, “When MTV asked her how she felt about coming in and playing the villain, her response was classic and the reason why I love that woman.. she said, “I’m coming to mess that shit up!”


    Theron joins franchise newcomers Scott Eastwood and Kristofer Hivju. In addition, Eva Mendes will return for the first time since “2 Fast 2 Furious” as former Customs agent Monica Fuentes. Star and producer Vin Diesel previously revealed that “Fast 8” would take place in New York City.

    “Fast 8” opens in theaters April 14, 2017.

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  • New Spider-Man Movie Titled ‘Spider-Man: Homecoming’

    CinemaCon 2016 - An Evening With Sony Pictures Entertainment: Celebrating The Summer Of 2016 And BeyondHoney, Spider-Man’s home!

    Sony unveiled the official title and logo for their upcoming “Spider-Man” film at CinemaCon in Las Vegas. The movie, which is co-produced by Marvel in their first-ever collaboration, is titled “Spider-Man: Homecoming.” Star Tom Holland made a surprise appearance to make the announcement.

    “It really is a homecoming for the character because throughout the story Peter is trying to find his true identity and where he belongs in the world,” Holland said.

    The actor also played a clip from “Captain America: Civil War,” which introduces Peter Parker as a high school student in New York City. The clip features Holland, Marisa Tomei (who plays Aunt May), and Robert Downey Jr. as Tony Stark. Tony offers Peter a research grant, setting up their mentoring relationship, which leads to Spider-Man taking Iron Man’s side in his big face-off against Captain America (Chris Evans).

    The title also emphasizes Peter’s youth (maybe he’ll ask Mary Jane to the dance), but also serves as a meta reference to the franchise’s return to Marvel’s creative control.

    “Spider-Man: Homecoming” opens in theaters July 7, 2017.

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  • Here’s the First Mind-Bending ‘Doctor Strange’ Trailer With Benedict Cumberbatch

    Benedict Cumberbatch gets a trippy (multiple) reality check in the first full trailer for “Doctor Strange,” another upcoming Marvel superhero movie. But unlike most other Marvel flicks, this one has a decidedly more psychedelic, mystical tone.

    The trailer gives us the broad strokes of the story: Dr. Stephen Strange is a gifted surgeon whose hands become crippled in an accident. Then, he meets the Ancient One (Tilda Swinton), who reveals that this reality is “one of many.”Marvel's 'Doctor Strange' (2016) Official Trailer

    Ever the doctor, Strange is skeptical at first. “I don’t believe in fairy tales about chakras or energy or the power of belief.” But after seeing some astonishing things — bending cityscapes, a la “Inception” — he’s begging to learn.

    “Doctor Strange,” which also stars Rachel McAdams, Chiwetel Ejiofor, and Mads Mikkelson, hits theaters November 4.

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  • Why Disney’s Live-Action ‘Jungle Book’ Has Deep Roots in ‘Bambi,’ ‘Lion King’

    Premiere Of Disney's "The Jungle Book" - ArrivalsIn anticipation of Disney‘s live-action adaptation of “The Jungle Book,” Moviefone had the opportunity to chat with director Jon Favreau about what inspired him to re-imagine the beloved animated classic.

    Opening this Friday, Favreau’s movie takes us back into the jungle with Mowgli and friends using cutting-edge technology that renders an incredible, photo-realistic world in 3D. When you see it, you’ll be shocked by the knowledge that “The Jungle Book” was shot entirely in Downtown Los Angeles using practical sets and Dolby vision laser projection. In other words, if you thought movies like “Avatar” and “Life of Pi” looked amazing, you ain’t seen nothin’ yet.

    We also get some of what we love from the original musical Walt Disney production but fit to reflect the time and outfitted with a stellar voice cast. Newcomer Neel Sethi plays Mowgli and is joined by Sir Ben Kingsley (Bagheera), Lupita Nyong’o (Raksha), Bill Murray (Baloo), Scarlett Johansson (Kaa), Idris Elba (Shere Khan), Giancarlo Esposito (Akilah) and Christopher Walken (King Louie).

    With all of this in mind, we couldn’t wait to talk to Favreau about raising the bar on visual storytelling using a tried and proven method: the Walt Disney way.

    Moviefone: What I took away the most from your take on “The Jungle Book” was just how steeped in Walt Disney’s philosophy for storytelling it was. You did what he did with fairy tales and the classic Kipling story to create a new take on a beloved movie. How did you go about mining the core of the original film’s narrative to build your own vision?

    Jon Favreau: You just can’t make the movie exactly like the old one. It wouldn’t work live-action, so we had to make some changes to it. Hopefully, we honored the legacy of the original one enough that you feel satisfied if you’re expecting that, but yet you’re seeing something that goes further in some ways.

    Enough people who love Disney have seen it that I feel comfortable that we didn’t at least put them off — that we didn’t do our homework and embrace the original. That was an important film for me.THE JUNGLE BOOK (Pictured) MOWGLI and BALOO. ©2016 Disney Enterprises, Inc. All Rights Reserved.When tackling this project, what helped you focus on the story you wanted to tell as you researched the original?

    It’s interesting because it’s not like going back to the original movie unlocked all those puzzles. The trick that I had done on “Iron Man” that had worked pretty well was: the first thing I do is try to remember and brainstorm for the images and the things I remember most clearly because if it sits clearly in your memory it’s probably been prioritized and is most important. And so “Bare Necessities” was a big one, and “I Wanna Be Like You,” King Louie and the crumbling temple, and Kaa with his hypnotic eyes, and the boy being woozy, and me being scared. And then floating down the river and singing, and Shere Khan and the torch, and the elephants and the baby elephant.

    I make a big list of all that stuff, and then I look at the materials because, when you watch it fresh, you’ll connect with different things. I wanted to make sure to include all those images that I had connected to. And then I actually took a lot of cues from the way the plot unfolds the story because that was actually well done. Walt’s a great story man, and that was very different from the book. We looked at the books, too, to get inspiration. Certain things the books were better at. I like the treatment of the elephants in the books. I like the treatment of Ikki, the porcupine, I liked Raksha, the mother. So I kinda pick and choose between the two. I think me being such a fan of the material and connecting with it gave me confidence that my instincts were going to be the instincts of others like me.

    With that wealth of information, how did you tread through it and not let it overwhelm your vision for “The Jungle Book”?

    They say a book is like designing a boat, and a screenplay is like designing an airplane. It has to lift. Once you hit the end of that runway, the thing has to take off. And if it doesn’t fly under its own engineering, it falls apart. So there are certain rules you have to stick by. You have to keep the pace at a certain rhythm, you have to have the right mixture of emotion and tone, and once you lock into that you could get clues from other movies. Honestly, as much as we looked at “Jungle Book,” we looked at “Bambi,” we looked at “Pinocchio,” we looked at “The Lion King.” For the PG version, we made, there were more clues in those films than there were in “The Jungle Book” for how to present it, because we always found ourselves tonally: a little too young, a little too humorous. So whenever we brought in a musical element or a humorous element from the original, we found ourselves really having to be careful that we didn’t trip up the whole film.THE JUNGLE BOOK (Pictured) BAGHEERA and MOWGLI. ©2016 Disney Enterprises, Inc. All Rights Reserved.On a recent trip to the old Ink and Paint building over at Walt Disney Studios, I saw a multi-plane shadowbox for the opening scene of “Bambi,” which I immediately thought of during the opening of your film in its composition.

    We looked at that shot. We looked at the opening of “Bambi” because back, when he was doing Bambi, Walt was still flushed with success and revenue from “Snow White,” which was a huge hit and, unfortunately, over Walt’s career, they were operating to diminishing returns from that point on. But Walt was so passionate that he would convince Roy, his brother, to give him the resources and the people that he needed. “Bambi” was really the one where he wanted to raise the bar like they were able to do in “Snow White” and that was his labor of love for many, many years.

    I don’t know if he was ever fully satisfied with the version that came out judging from the notes that I had read, because the studio was coming into a lot of other challenges. I think the war was coming on or the strike. I think it was the strike for that film, and there was definitely a version of the film he was going for and what was nice is that he got stenographers keeping notes of all their story sessions. On the Blu-ray of “Bambi,” you hear them talking about how they were gonna make the animals look photo-real, and the tone of the performance vs. how cartooney they were in “Snow White,” how realistic they were presenting them, and the way there were gonna show the photo-real backgrounds, and how they would stylize things. And the way they would treat the hunter, and the way they would treat the weather. Hearing it in his read-back transcript, it was almost like having him available to us. And he really was wrestling with a lot of things people wrestle with today. Certainly, we did.

    So we drew inspiration looking at the shots. The beauty of the shots in “Bambi” were unsurpassed by the time we got to the ’67 “Jungle Book” film. Although character animation was still hitting a high watermark because you had the Nine Old Men around. I think most if not all of them were still around for the animated emotional moments. You didn’t have the same lushness of the multi-plane, nearly the amount of artists designing a project like this. And, although it was a big success for them financially, it wasn’t embraced in the same way the films like “Snow White” were in its day. So I think by trying to channel the entire Disney legacy and then also “The Lion King,” which came afterwards (that was affected very much by “The Jungle Book” if you hear the animators of that one speak). I think that one was essential in having fun musical moments but also having scary moments, where characters are in serious danger.

    And taking cues from Walt there makes so much sense, it immerses you in Mowgli’s world, with its practical and CGI surroundings.

    He used to do that with his “Alice” and old “Laugh-O-Gram” stuff by having a live-action girl in an illustrated world. It was something he was first drawn to. So yeah, we really tried to honor the legacy but tried to do something new and exciting that just stands on its own two feet.

    We’ve got to talk casting; this is an incredible ensemble. What inspired you to approach the talent attached to the film?

    That’s a big part of my job. You know Walt Disney in “The Jungle Book” was the only time he did celebrity casting because those people were famous back then before the film, so I think it gave me permission to go after higher people like Christopher Walken or Idris Elba.

    Loved the cowbell reference by the way. So meta!THE JUNGLE BOOK - (Pictured) MOWGLI and KING LOUIE ©2015 Disney Enterprises, Inc. All Rights Reserved.Did you catch it? I’m so glad it’s in there. That was an on-set discovery. That was a prop in the background that I pulled and I said, “Oh my god, this is what Mowgli has to use. I knew he had to touch something that would get the attention of King Louie and I saw the cowbell off to the side and I pulled that in and swapped it out for the prop that we had designed for it.

    Awesome. Sorry, back to casting…

    With Christopher Walken and Bill Murray, I let them really be themselves and be recognizable through the characters. I think that was part of what made the original special as well.

    Disney’s “The Jungle Book” opens Friday, April 15th.

  • It’s Raining Cats and Dogs in New ‘Secret Life of Pets’ Trailer

    Secret Life of PetsWho let the dogs out? In “The Secret Life of Pets,” they did it themselves!

    A new, full-length trailer for the animated movie features the same cheeky humor as the teaser trailer, but lays out a bit more of the story. Max (voice of Louis C.K.) is a happy-go-lucky dog living in New York City whose world is turned upside down when his owner brings in a new “brother,” a gigantic, slobbering mutt named Duke (Eric Stonestreet).
    When Max tries to sabotage Duke and get him kicked out of the apartment, his plan backfires, and both dogs are taken by animal control. It’s up to Max’s friends, including a conniving bunny (Kevin Hart), to rescue them. The trailer is cute and fun, with a lot of gentle humor about how pets behave when their owners aren’t watching.

    “The Secret Life of Pets” opens in theaters July 8.

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  • 5 Things You Need to Know Before Seeing Disney’s ‘The Jungle Book’

    Disney’s latest live-action update of one of its classic animated features is “The Jungle Book.” But don’t expect just a shiny CG update of the 1967 cartoon that turned Rudyard Kipling’s fierce beasts into mostly adorable, toy-ready critters. For one thing, if you’ve seen the trailers, you know this new version features some impressive-looking animals, speaking with the voices of some impressive stars. For another thing, its director is Jon Favreau, who helped launch the Marvel Cinematic Universe with “Iron Man.”

    Favreau and Disney clearly wanted to make something more than just a retread of the studio’s 1967 cartoon — or Disney’s 1994 live-action version. Judging by the 100% approval rating from critics on Rotten Tomatoes, they’ve pulled it off. Here are five things you need to know before entering the “Jungle.”

    1. Think ‘Avatar,’ Only Earthbound
    The James Cameron epic is a movie Favreau has name-checked often in describing the exotic, immersive, 3D forest world he’s tried to create here. From its setting to its jungle animals, Favreau’s film is almost completely CGI — except, of course, for Neel Sethi, the 12-year-old New York native who plays wild boy Mowgli.

    Favreau and his effects team shot the whole film on stages in downtown Los Angeles, digitally added lush vegetation, and populated it with creatures based on the appearances and movements of real animals — but given an artistic flourish by digital animators. Imagine the CGI tiger in “Life of Pi,” except that he’s moving his lips as Idris Elba’s (above) menacing voice emerges from his mouth.

    2. This Is No Cartoon
    The generally-lighthearted 1967 cartoon wasn’t especially faithful to the source material. Favreau has said his film delves deeper into the Kipling stories, which means the animals are more savage and the danger to Mowgli is greater. Elba’s tiger Shere Khan is reportedly one of the scariest screen villains since — well, Elba’s warlord in “Beasts of No Nation.” No wonder some critics are calling the film a kiddie “Revenant.”

    3. It’s Not Just a Guy Thing
    Favreau decided that the cartoon, populated almost exclusively by male characters, needed more feminine presences. So Kaa the Python got a sex change; she’s voiced by Scarlett Johansson (pictured). Interestingly, in “Jungle Book: Origins,” Andy Serkis‘ upcoming 2017 take on the same public-domain Kipling stories, which will also mix live-action actors and motion-capture animals, Kaa will be female as well, voiced by Cate Blanchett.

    Favreau also beefed up the role of Raksha, the wolf mother who adopts Mowgli. She doesn’t even speak in the cartoon, but here, she’s voiced by no less a luminary than Lupita Nyong’o.

    4. The Animals Are Zoologically Correct
    Well, except for the whole talking thing. But at least Baloo (Bill Murray) is now more obviously a sloth bear, a mammal native to India, than the generic bear of the cartoon. Alas, there are no orangutans in India, so King Louie (Christopher Walken) is now a Gigantopithecus (pictured), an orangutan-like ape that is now extinct but which did once live in India.

    5. Don’t Worry, Your Favorite Songs Are Still Here
    Darker tone aside, Favreau made sure to keep some of the cartoon’s comic-relief moments, as is apparent by the casting of Murray and Walken. (The late Garry Shandling is here, too, as a nervous porcupine.)

    Baloo does get to sing “Bare Necessities” and Louie still sings “I Wan’na Be Like You.” Richard M. Sherman, who wrote that song’s lyrics 50 years ago, has updated the words for the new film. And Kaa still delivers the hypnotic “Trust in Me” — though, instead of Sterling Holloway’s Winnie-the-Pooh bluster, the snake now purrs the words in Johansson’s seductive, unsettling rasp.

    “Jungle Book” hits theaters Friday.

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  • Disney Is Already Working on ‘Jungle Book 2’: Report

    Disney is riding high on its upcoming live-action take on “The Jungle Book,” so much so that it’s reportedly already working on a sequel to the flick.

    According to The Hollywood Reporter, the Mouse House has tapped director Jon Favreau and writer Justin Marks to once again assume those roles on the follow-up, which will reportedly be based on other Mowgli-centric stories by author Rudyard Kipling, who penned the original “Jungle Book” tales in the late 1800s. “Disney plans to dig deep into the source material,” per THR.

    While this isn’t exactly a new concept — a film getting a sequel order before it hits domestic theaters — it’s good news for the studio, which bet big on its latest trend of live-action remakes of its original animated films, including recent hits like “Cinderella” and “Alice in Wonderland.” “The Jungle Book” — inspired by Disney’s 1967 version of Kipling’s book — is already doing solid business overseas, where it’s opened to the tune of $31.7 million in several international markets (including $8.4 million in India, good for second place on the country’s all-time list of western movie openings).

    It’s unclear if any or all of the starry “Jungle Book” voice cast (which includes Bill Murray, Lupita Nyong’o, Scarlett Johansson, Idris Elba, and Ben Kingsley) will return for the follow-up, but expect newcomer Neel Sethi, who plays Mowgli, to be front and center.

    [via: The Hollywood Reporter]

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