THE JUNGLE BOOK

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DIRECTED BY Jon Favreau

STARS Bill Murray, Ben Kingsley

Forget โ€œThe Bare Necessitiesโ€; the bare fact of the matter is that Disneyโ€™s 1967 animated hit The Jungle Book, the most famous film version of Rudyard Kiplingโ€™s stories, is the least effective of the various celluloid adaptations.

Made during the studioโ€™s mostly barren stretch between its two golden ages, the movie plays better in nostalgia-tinged memories than in the here-and-now, hampered by rudimentary animation, annoying interpretations of beloved characters and, save for the aforementioned โ€œThe Bare Necessities,โ€ forgettable tunes.

Far better are the 1942 British production starring 18-year-old Sabu as Mowgli, the underrated 1994 take with 28-year-old Jason Scott Lee in the primary role, and, now, a new edition featuring 12-year-old newcomer Neel Sethi as the young boy raised by wolves.

This incarnation initially spends more time than the other versions on the wolf pack, as Raksha (voiced by Lupita Nyongโ€™o) and Akela (Giancarlo Esposito) raise Mowgli alongside their cubs. But when the ferocious, man-hating tiger Shere Khan (Idris Elba) makes it clear that nothing will stop him from killing the boy, itโ€™s decided that Mowgli will be taken to live with his own kind, escorted in his journey by his friend and protector, the noble panther Bagheera (Ben Kingsley).

But the trip doesnโ€™t go as planned, with Mowgli finding himself alone and in the clutches of the snake Kaa (Scarlett Johansson) before heโ€™s rescued by the garrulous bear Baloo (Bill Murray). Yet his troubles are just getting warmed up, as he still has to contend with a seemingly crazed ape named King Louie (Christopher Walken) as well as the ever-present threat of Shere Khan.

In much the same manner as Kenneth Branaghโ€™s enchanting Cinderella last year, director Jon Favreau and scripter Justin Marks have crafted a film that manages to pay tribute both to the original tale as well as its animated adaptation. (You would think there wouldnโ€™t be any room in this nonmusical version for โ€œThe Bare Necessitiesโ€ and โ€œI Wanโ€™na Be Like You.โ€ You would be wrong.)

More importantly, their movie employs CGI to dazzling, seamless effect, resulting in an immersive viewing experience rather than the distancing sensation often created by motion pictures that live and die by the computer. With the exception of Mowgli, everything else is artificial, from the lush jungle surroundings to the anthropomorphic animals surrounding the โ€œman-cubโ€ protagonist. Itโ€™s an immaculate presentation, further buoyed by John Debneyโ€™s catchy score. (Save your money, though, by nixing the 3-D option; it adds very little.)

The voice actors are appropriately cast, even if none really stand out in the manner of, say, Ratatouilleโ€™s Patton Oswalt or Aladdinโ€™s Robin Williams. Idris is menacing as Shere Khan, Johansson is an interesting choice for Kaa, and Walken (he who possesses one of the most distinctive voices in Hollywood) gives us a Louie who almost belongs in a live-action gangster or horror flick.

As for Murray, heโ€™s an expected scene-stealer as Baloo, and Iโ€™m all for more Jungle Book pictures if it prevents him from lending his vocals to any more infernal Garfield atrocities.