Bridget Boyle
Johanson
Eng 105-39
23, February 2015
The Jungle Book Disney has the ability to make children out of adults and turn old stories in to movies that are memorable for all. From Snow White to Frozen, Disney has been capturing audience’s attention no matter what age group. One of the most notable films is the Jungle Book. The Jungle Book is an amazing story that takes viewer through the life of Mowgli who was a boy that was raised by wolves. The young boy must leave from his wolf family in order to escape the man-eating tiger named Shere Khan. With the Indian boy's fellow companions Bagheera and Baloo the audience experiences a great and positive story, fun songs, amazing animations for the time, and characters that
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The movie is able to capture the great voices of the characters and easily match it up with the amazing drawing skills of the animators at Walt Disney Studios. The characters drawn in a great way and have great actors voicing behind them.
Characters are one of the most important part to any story, movie, or book. The protagonist in The Jungle Book really makes the story that it is. The main character Mowgli plays a good role in the story allowing the younger viewers to relate with him and his young age. The kids who watch the movie can understand, love the child like comedy, and enjoy all the songs that the characters sing together. The other two key protagonist, Bagheera and Baloo, really make things easier for the parental viewers to relate too. When watching the movie any of the older audience can see that Bagheera and Baloo are more like parents to the young Mowgli. They protect Mowgli from danger and teach him valuable life lessons. With the protagonist appealing to both children and parents, The Jungle Book makes this a great family friendly movie. On the other hand, there are the antagonist in the movie like King Louie the orangutan, Kaa the snake, and the main antagonist Shere Khan the tiger. When looking at these characters the viewer at first see the trickery of the antagonist. Also all these characters are looking to do harm to the young Mowgli but again the parent figures of Bagheera and Baloo come to
If you're unfamiliar with the character of Mowgli, then you might better remember the story "The Jungle Book". If you haven't seen it anywhere else, you'd know it as the Disney cartoon from decades past.
In the realm of entertainment, Disney leads the way with creativity, bringing to life fairytales and stories that only the most imaginative child could come up with. Children of all ages, teenagers, and adults leave the theater of a Disney movie inspired, empowered, and entranced by the magic and wonder brought about.
The Jungle by Upton Sinclair is a vivid account of life for the working class in the early 1900s. Jurgis Rudkus and his family travel to the United States in search of the American dream and an escape from the rigid social structure of Lithuania. Instead, they find a myriad of new difficulties. Sinclair attributes their problems to the downfalls of capitalism in the United States. While America’s system was idealistic for Jurgis and his family at first, the mood of the story quickly transforms to assert that capitalism is evil. This theme drives the author’s message and relay of major issues throughout the entirety of the novel. The idea of capitalism and social Darwinism is to
The Jungle is book that takes the reader in a period in time where the “American Dream” was the only thing worth believing in the daily job struggles of immigrants in America during the early twentieth century. What is the American Dream? It is said that any man or woman willing to work hard in this country and work an honest day is capable living and could support his family and have an equal opportunity to success. Although The Jungle was taken account more on how the meat production was disgusting and unhealthy for production and consumption. However many missed the real message of this book in which Sinclair wants to engage the reader in particular scenario of the failure of capitalism. According to Sinclair, socialism is the only way out of the failure of capitalism. It is the way that all problems can be solved and works for the benefit of everyone where capitalism works against the people. The slow destruction of Jurgis’s family at the hands of a cruel and unfair economic and social system demonstrates the effect of capitalism on the working class. As the immigrants, who believe an idealistic faith in the American Dream of hard work leading to material success, are slowly used up, tortured, and destroyed.
The Jungle, by Upton Sinclair and Narrative of the life of Frederick Douglass, an American Slave, by Frederick Douglass both bring forth personal or fictional events that capture the interest of the the reader. The use of pathos in their writing along with true events questions the ethics, morality, and human rights of each individual at the time setting for the publication.
What societal and government reforms did “The Jungle” call for. Do you feel this novel was effective in bringing about any of these reforms.
What images come to mind as you reflect on your childhood? Playgrounds, blackboards, and soccer balls may be among the warmest of memories. Yet for many mermaids swim their thoughts, princesses get swept of their feet, and lions roar to their loyal place in the animal kingdom. There is no doubt that today’s entertainment has most of its touch using classical influences. Walt Disney has produced animated films that have captured the heart and imagination of audiences of all ages around the world through the magic of storytelling and imagery. Many of us appreciate the imagination and magic that Disney puts into its animations with out knowing they are based off of classical and traditional storylines
The Jungle, a novel by the muckraker Upton Sinclair, follows the life of Lithuanian immigrant Jurgis Rudkus and his family in the first decade of the twentieth century. It describes the various tragedies that befall the family. The novel should be considered part of the American Canon, the body of works that are considered the most important and influential in shaping American culture, because of Sinclair’s unique portrayal of the time, the effect that this novel had on society, and the novel’s literary value.
“Everything you see exists together in a delicate balance. As king, you need to understand that balance, and respect all the creatures from the crawling ant to the leaping antelope,” said Mufasa, a supporting character in the film depiction of Walt Disney’s: The Lion King (1994). The Lion King is a timeless archetypal work that time after time has given youth hope and has shown them that courage is not always innate, but can be learned from just living life with a little “hakuna matata”. The Lion King, through the use of classic archetype, vivid surrealism, and iconic symbolism, shows a coming to age story that shows children that life is an adventure worth the trouble.
The Disney movie I will focus on will be The Jungle Book. An Indian boy who was left in the jungle by his father. The boy was the only human in the jungle; however, a black panther named Bagheera, and a pack of wolves raised the boy whom they called Mowgli or man cub. A tiger by the name of Shere Khan, wants Mowgli to leave the jungle because he wants the power, but he wants to stay. He sets off on a journey and along the way, he learns about himself, meets many friends, and enemies. Mowgli adventures, lessons, and social interaction all came from two friends who were with him along the way and they are Bagheera, and free-spirited bear, named Baloo.
Lazarus states her thesis by saying: “The Lion King is breaking box office records. But it’s not breaking stereotypes (1)”. She discusses how at first she believes it will be different from the traditional Disney movies because it is based on a group of animals and not on sexist princess movies such as The Little Mermaid and Beauty and the Beast (1). Lazarus says she had grown “weary of reinforcing women’s subordinate status by screening fables about a beauty who tames an angry male beast or a mermaid who gives up her glorious voice and splits her body to be with a prince.(1)”
Lazarus states her thesis by saying: “The Lion King is breaking box office records. But it’s not breaking stereotypes (1)”. She discusses how at first she believes it will be different from the traditional Disney movies because it is based on a group of animals and not on sexist princess movies such as The Little Mermaid and Beauty and the Beast (1). Lazarus says she had grown “weary of reinforcing women’s subordinate status by screening fables about a beauty who tames an angry male beast or a mermaid who gives up her glorious voice and splits her body to be with a prince.(1)”
Summary of The Lion King: In the Disney animation loved by families everywhere, The Lion King, Simba, the young lion born into royalty. His parents have high expectation and have strict boundaries. The Lion King follows Simba as he explores the plains of Africa and stirs up trouble with his uncle, Scar.
With the success of Disney’s The Lion King, based off of William Shakespeare’s Hamlet, it only made sense to produce a sequel to the movie based off of another great Shakespearean work. Romeo and Juliet has been reworked many times, but a fairly overlooked adaptation is Disney’s The Lion King II: Simba’s Pride. The story of the “star crossed lovers” is now seen through the forbidden love of the lions Kiara, a pridelander, and Kovu, an outsider. Much like the original Lion King, there were significant alterations that changed the meaning of the work. In the sequel, details such as characterization/setting, the level of maturity in love and violence, and adjusted plotline (the shift from tragedy to comedy) change the overall theme and allow the work to be more suitable for children.
It is no surprise people enjoy stories of overcoming the odds. This is why both children and adults love the movie Zootopia. Walt Disney’s Zootopia is a heartwarming story on its own, but when it is analyzed, the movie has deeper meaning and lessons to learn. Zootopia not only has many post-colonial aspects that explain the mammals’ way of life, but it displays psychoanalytic tendencies about how the main characters childhoods affected them later in life.