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Jungle Book or Rudyard Kipling's Jungle Book is a 1942 independent Technicolor action-adventure film by the Korda brothers, loosely adapted from Rudyard Kipling's The Jungle Book (1894). The story centers on Mowgli , a feral young man who is kidnapped by villagers who are cruel to the jungle animals as they attempt to steal a dead king's cursed ...
The Jungle Book is a 2016 American fantasy adventure film directed and produced by Jon Favreau, written by Justin Marks and produced by Walt Disney Pictures.It is a live-action animated remake of Disney's 1967 animated film The Jungle Book, [1] [6] which itself is loosely based on Rudyard Kipling's story collection The Jungle Book.
The Jungle Book, from the 1967 film. The Jungle Book, a 1994 adaptation of the 1967 film. The Jungle Book Groove Party, a 2000 dance video game. The Jungle Book: Alive with Magic, a 2016 amusement ride. The Jungle Book, an EP by That Handsome Devil, consisting of covers of songs from the 1967 film.
Few of the tracks were incorporated from the 1967 film's soundtrack written by Sherman Brothers and Terry Gilkyson. The score was recorded at Los Angeles, California and New Orleans, with prominent players and large orchestral members recording the score. Walt Disney Records released the film's soundtrack on April 15, 2016. It received positive ...
The Jungle Book 2 (animated) The Land Before Time X: The Great Longneck Migration (animated) Marci X; The Music Man (television film) Not on the Lips (Pas sur la bouche) Piglet's Big Movie (animated) Rugrats Go Wild (animated) The Saddest Music in the World; School of Rock; Seeing Double; The Singing Detective
The Jungle Book Groove Party is a music rhythm video game developed by Ubisoft and published by Disney Interactive for PlayStation and PlayStation 2. Featuring similar gameplay to the Dance Dance Revolution series, the game features characters and songs from the 1967 animated film The Jungle Book. The game was packaged with a dance pad.
The instrumental music was written by George Bruns and orchestrated by Walter Sheets. Two of the cues were reused from previous Disney films, with the scene where Mowgli wakes up after escaping King Louie using one of Bruns' themes for Sleeping Beauty, and Bagheera giving a eulogy to Baloo when he mistakenly thinks the bear was killed by Shere Khan being accompanied by Paul J. Smith's organ ...
The first such album to be commercially released was Walt Disney's Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, the soundtrack to the film Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, in 1938. [2] The first soundtrack album of a film's orchestral score was that for Alexander Korda's 1942 film Rudyard Kipling's Jungle Book, composed by Miklós Rózsa. [3]