Tag: the jungle book

  • Best of 2016: Biggest Movies at the Box Office

    Captain America: Civil War, The Jungle Book, Finding Dory
    Captain America: Civil War, The Jungle Book, Finding Dory

    Biggest Movies at Box Office – From Deadpool to Finding Dory

    Animals and action. That’s the formula for box office success from 2016 with the top movies featuring critters who swim, crawl and slither and comic book characters who can’t stop fighting. Here are the top films from 2016 at the domestic box office, along with behind-the-screen interviews and special features from Made in Hollywood.

    5. Deadpool – $363 million

    Could an R-rated comic book movie succeed? “Deadpool” proved it could and a whole lot more, taking the traditional elements from the Marvel cinematic universe — heroes, villains, superpowers, special effects set pieces — and adding racy language, steamy sex, astute satire, sharp-edged irony, nifty acting by Ryan Reynolds, and laugh-out-loud comedy to create a unique blockbuster.

    4. The Jungle Book – $364 million

    Shot in a blue-screen studio in downtown LA, this CGI extravaganza brings the animated class to life, the tale of the boy raised in the jungle infused with lush landscapes and creatures so authentic — and sometimes so scary — you can practically feel their fur. Big names like Scarlett Johansson, Bill Murray and Lupita Nyong’o provide the voices, but the star of “The Jungle Book” is really director Jon Favrea who pulled off this amazing blend of art and science.

    3. The Secret Life of Pets – $368 million

    So that’s what they do all day when we’re not around. This animated romp stars a spoiled terrier voiced by Louis C.K. and a bad-attitude bunny named Snowball (Kevin Hart) on a mission against the humans who’ve done them wrong. After watching “The Secret Life of Pets” you’ll never forget to refill that food bowl again.

    2. Captain America: Civil War – $408 million

    It had to happen sooner or later. The Avengers break down into warring factions pitting Chris Evans’ Captain America against Robert Downey Jr.‘s Iron Man — with Black Widow (Scarlett Johansson” and Hawkeye (Jeremy Renner) caught in the middle. If you didn’t see the Big Fight to the Finish coming in this second Marvel movie in the Top 5, well, you must be losing your own super powers.


    1. Finding Dory – $486 million

    They say sequels are never as good as the original. Well, they haven’t seen “Finding Dory.” The long-awaited followup to the 2003 smash “Finding Nemo” has the world’s favorite forgetful blue tang fish Dory (voiced again by Ellen DeGeneres) embarking on a journey with her friends Nemo and Marlin to find her parents.

    20058395 20056913 20069630 65108 58769
  • How The Jungle Book Creators Obsessed Over Making the Perfect Loincloth

    Neel Sethi as Mowgli in The Jungle Book
    Neel Sethi as Mowgli in The Jungle Book

    The Jungle Book Costume Designer Talks the Painstaking Effort to Make the Perfect Loincloth

    It may be a jungle out there for Mowgli. But at least he can run around in style. That little red loincloth he’s wearing in “The Jungle Book” is made with fine Italian cloth.

    In dressing the young boy, costume designer Laura Jean Shannon says the goal was to “create something that looked effortless but really actually took quite a bit of thought and quite a process to come up with. I had upwards of at least a dozen loincloths that we started with in different shapes.”

    By the time all those work hours are factored in, from the historical research to the design, from the shopping to the sewing, ounce for ounce this may be one the most obsessed-over loincloths ever created.

    Neel Sethi in The Jungle Book
    Neel Sethi in The Jungle Book

    The Process Begins With Discussion Between Director and The Jungle Book Costume Designer

    Mowgli, played by newcomer Neel Sethi, is one of only a few live-action characters requiring real costumes; Shannon also outfitted Mowgli’s father (Ritesh Rajan) and some village boys. The rest of the characters consist of computer-animated animals voiced by big stars: Baloo (Bill Murray), Bagheera (Ben Kingsley), Shere Khan (Idris Elba), Raksha (Lupita Nyong’o) and Kaa (Scarlett Johansson).

    Shannon, who has worked with director Jon Favreau on most of his movies since the late 1990s, including “Elf,” says they began the process by considering the heavy responsibility of remaking such a beloved classic. Disney released the original animated “The Jungle Book” in 1967.

    “It did start with us discussing the original cartoon film from when we were children and how meaningful that was and how we wanted to have an evocative feeling of that Mowgli,” she says.

    Then began the process of carefully integrating her costume designs with the look and feel of the CGI-generated cast and sets.

    “We all watched a pre-visualized entire film so that we could see all of the scenes and all of the characters and how they played together,” she says. “It was very, very important to know what the action was, what Neel and his other little buddies would be doing so that we could really think ahead and make sure that we had covered all of our bases.”

    The Jungle Book Costume Designer Then Goes Shopping for Loincloth Material

    Next came shopping

    “When you are designing any costume, but especially this one for sure, you start by fabric swatching, and I found the perfect fabric really right away,” Shannon says. “It was an Italian gauzy fabric that had enough opacity that we could use it for a loincloth, but also had enough lightness and life to it that I could paint into it and give it age and wear and make it look really authentic to the jungle.”

    Different scenes required different loincloths. “For instance, he gets immersed in mud,” Shannon says. “When a loincloth gets muddy it gets droopy and it looks like a diaper, which was something we had to be very careful to not have happen.”

    Also, Mowgli’s costume had to reflect his development as a character. “The costume that’s worn by baby Mowgli actually morphs into what our Mowgli, that we see throughout the film, wears,” she says. “It’s almost as if he’s taken what he had as a small child and retrofitted it into his larger form.”

    And while the costume options were limited, there was one other design of which Shannon can be particularly proud.

    “We also have a costume that he dresses in for protective purposes that’s sort of a leaf armor made out of actual living plants,” she says. “That was probably my biggest challenge — besides the fact that he and all of the guys were growing so fast — was figuring out how to build a costume out of living plants that would actually hold out and be able to take all of the action in the film.”

    20056913
  • ‘The Jungle Book’ Was Shot Entirely in the Wilds of … Downtown L.A.

     

    signs

    To find those lush, leafy, watery, steamy locations of great beauty and lurking danger for “The Jungle Book,” director Jon Favreau only had to follow the signs.

    The Caltrans signs.

    The stunning images in the trailer for the live-action/CGI reboot of the Disney animated classic all originated just off the 101 Freeway — and a long way from the wilds of India where the story of young Mowgli is set.

    “None are real,” Favreau said in a Twitter chat Tuesday to a commenter impressed by how “pretty authentic” the locations looked. “All are CGI. The whole movie was shot in downtown LA.”

    Maybe rename the movie “The Concrete Jungle Book?”

    Watch the trailer below:

    20056913
  • ‘The Jungle Book’ Takes Dark Turn in Disney’s Live-Action Reboot

    https://youtu.be/HcgJRQWxKnw

    “Are you alone here? What are you doing so deep in the jungle?” begins a seductive voiceover from Scarlett Johansson in the live-action version of Disney’s “The Jungle Book.”

    The blonde bombshell takes on the role of nefarious Kaa, a hungry python that wants man-cub Mowgli, played by Neel Sethi, as her dinner. Mowgli, an orphaned Indian boy who has been raised by wolves, has outgrown his welcome in the jungle–and as he navigates his way out, he finds adventure, danger, new friends and enemies on a journey of self-discovery.

    The first trailer, released Tuesday, of director Jon Favreau’s re-imagining of Rudyard Kipling’s 1894 story approaches a more faithful, ominous return to its origin than Disney’s lighthearted 1967 animated film.

    In a Twitter Q&A after its release Tuesday, Favreau said that the tone is “a mix btwn the original animated version and a modern action/adventure.” Fans of the animated classic will find fond memories in the trailer’s end, which shows Mowgli floating down a river on-top free-spirited bear Baloo, voiced by Bill Murray, who whistles the melody to the Disney feature’s popular anthem “Bare Necessities.”

    But Favreau adds that the entire songbook will not be included, as it would “betray action tone.”

    “We wanted to include enough music for people who grew up w 67 film,” he tweeted.

    The all-star cast includes voice contributions from Idris Elba as villain tiger Shere Khan, Ben Kingsley as panther-mentor Bagheera, Christopher Walken as monkey King Louie, Lupita Nyong’o as mother wolf Raksha and Giancarlo Esposito as wolf pack leader Akela.

    “The Jungle Book” opens on April 15, 2016.

    20056913
  • ‘The Jungle Book’ Was Filmed in the Wilds of … Downtown L.A.

    signs

    To find those lush, leafy, watery, steamy locations of great beauty and lurking danger for “The Jungle Book,” director Jon Favreau only had to follow the signs.

    The Caltrans signs.

    The stunning images in the trailer for the live-action/CGI reboot of the Disney animated classic all originated just off the 101 Freeway — and a long way from the wilds of India where the story of young Mowgli is set.

    “None are real,” Favreau said in a Twitter chat Tuesday to a commenter impressed by how “pretty authentic” the locations looked. “All are CGI. The whole movie was shot in downtown LA.”

    Maybe rename the movie “The Concrete Jungle Book?”

    Watch the trailer below:

     

    20056913