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The Jungle Book Poster

The Jungle Book

The Jungle is JUMPIN'!
1967 | 78m | English

(208585 votes)

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Popularity: 7 (history)

Details

The boy Mowgli makes his way to the man-village with Bagheera, the wise panther. Along the way he meets jazzy King Louie, the hypnotic snake Kaa and the lovable, happy-go-lucky bear Baloo, who teaches Mowgli "The Bare Necessities" of life and the true meaning of friendship.
Release Date: Oct 18, 1967
Director: Wolfgang Reitherman
Writer: Rudyard Kipling, Ken Anderson, Vance Gerry, Larry Clemmons, Ralph Wright
Genres: Animation, Family, Adventure
Keywords based on novel or book, narration, human animal relationship, cartoon, villain, musical, feral child, coming of age, anthropomorphism, jungle, orphan, india, animal lead
Production Companies Walt Disney Productions
Box Office Revenue: $378,000,000
Budget: $4,000,000
Updates Updated: Aug 19, 2025 (Update)
Entered: Apr 13, 2024
Trailers and Extras

Full Credits

Name Character
Bruce Reitherman Mowgli the Man Cub (voice)
Phil Harris Baloo the Bear (voice)
Sebastian Cabot Bagheera the Panther (voice)
George Sanders Shere Khan the Tiger (voice)
Sterling Holloway Kaa the Snake (voice)
Louis Prima King Louie of the Apes (voice)
J. Pat O'Malley Col. Hathi the Elephant / Buzzie (voice)
Clint Howard Junior (voice)
Chad Stuart Dizzy (voice)
Lord Tim Hudson Flaps (voice)
John Abbott Akela (voice)
Ben Wright Rama (voice)
Darleen Carr The Girl (voice)
Verna Felton Winifred (voice)
Bill Lee Shere Khan (singing) / Elephant Soldier (voice) (uncredited)
Digby Wolfe Ziggy (voice) (uncredited)
Hal Smith Slob Elephant (uncredited)
Pete Henderson Bandar-Log (voice) (uncredited)
Bill Skiles Bandar-Log (voice) (uncredited)
Leo De Lyon Flunky Monkey (voice) (uncredited)
Ralph Wright Gloomy Elephant (voice) (uncredited)
James MacDonald Shere Khan & Bagheera’s Roars (voice) (uncredited)
Name Job
Don Griffith Layout
Tom Codrick Layout
Bill Layne Background Designer
Ralph Hulett Background Designer
Art Riley Background Designer
Thelma Witmer Background Designer
Don A. Duckwall Production Manager
Robert O. Cook Sound
Evelyn Kennedy Music Editor
Walter Sheets Orchestrator
John Tucker Animation Production Assistant
Rudyard Kipling Story, Novel
Wolfgang Reitherman Director
Ken Anderson Story
Vance Gerry Story
Milt Kahl Animation Director
Ollie Johnston Animation Director
Frank Thomas Animation Director
John Lounsbery Animation Director
Robert B. Sherman Songs
Richard M. Sherman Songs
George Bruns Original Music Composer
Tom Acosta Editor
Norman Carlisle Editor
Larry Clemmons Story
Ralph Wright Story
Basil Davidovich Layout
Dale Barnhart Layout
Sylvia Roemer Layout
Al Dempster Background Designer
Frank Armitage Background Designer
Name Title
Walt Disney Producer
Organization Category Person
Venice Film Festival Best Supporting Actor Sebastian Cabot Nominated
Cannes Film Festival Best Animated Feature N/A Won
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 59 70 47
2024 5 65 79 55
2024 6 75 113 46
2024 7 76 105 54
2024 8 59 72 50
2024 9 51 62 43
2024 10 56 87 40
2024 11 52 74 41
2024 12 48 62 36
2025 1 53 64 46
2025 2 42 60 8
2025 3 18 49 3
2025 4 9 14 6
2025 5 8 14 6
2025 6 8 11 6
2025 7 7 8 6
2025 8 7 9 6
2025 9 8 9 7

Trending Position


Year Month High Avg
2025 8 214 585
Year Month High Avg
2025 7 667 812
Year Month High Avg
2025 5 651 691
Year Month High Avg
2025 4 911 911
Year Month High Avg
2025 3 691 765
Year Month High Avg
2025 2 845 916
Year Month High Avg
2025 1 511 848
Year Month High Avg
2024 12 438 747
Year Month High Avg
2024 11 332 668
Year Month High Avg
2024 9 994 994
Year Month High Avg
2024 8 858 917

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Reviews

Kamurai
6.0

Good watch, might watch again, and can recommend if you've seen any other version or are looking for a writing analysis. During a lot of the movie, I was kind of in nostalgia mode, remember things I saw / felt when I was a kid, just sort of enjoying the way back machine experience. It wasn't u ... ntil almost the very last scene that it clicked how good the writing is in this. I know this is known for the excellent animation styling, the catchy tunes, and charming coming of age semantics, but this uses several strong formulas that have been used since Aesop's fables. And that's what made me realize the writing quality, I felt as if I was watching an on fable with moral lessons of consequence. Up until that point I was mentally preparing how this 1967 animation is actually a perfect metaphor for 2020 entitled child entering the real world: never being told no, even to the threat of great, potentially lethal, loss because even in the face of danger, they've been taught that they deserve, even in the logic that it can't be true on both sides though both believe that. Hmmm, that sounds a lot like religious war. Digressing back to the writing: Mowgli embodies naivety, narcissism, entitlement, whatever you would like to call as he's a victim / ward of extreme chances of compassion: he just happens to luck into survival wherever he goes. While Tarzan makes more sense, this is character development for the series of situations (each one their own potential fable) with the main character shifting to and fro from Bagera to Mowgli to Balloo, each one being taught lessons as the adventure continues. With the representation of the jungle and the adversities that Mowgli faces, Mowgli slowly learns what Bagera and Baloo both know: most people are only interested in their own interests, but sometimes those that have enough can be in a position to help others. The xenoism (racism) that Sher Khan has for Mowgli as a human is enough for these predators give up his companionship to help him to the man-village. The really odd lesson is that Mowgli embraces the self-interest needed in the jungle, despite dialogue to the contrary.

Jun 23, 2021
Geronimo1967
7.0

This has probably the most perfect balance of story and soundtrack of any film I've ever seen - animated or otherwise. Adapting Rudyard Kipling's tale of "Mowgli" the child abandoned in the Indian jungle, but rescued and raised by a family of wolves. "Bagheera", the sagacious panther realises as the ... boy starts to grow to manhood, that he ought to return to his own kind but "Baloo", the avuncular bear thinks otherwise and so takes our young man-cub on some fun adventures in the jungle - including some near-misses with the wonderfully menacing, sardonic tiger "Shere Khan" and "Kaa" the hypnotic python. The voice cast - especially Phil Harris as the bear and George Sanders as the tiger are great; Louis Prima as "Louie" the King of the Apes provides us with one of the best songs ever to feature in a Disney film - and the Sherman brothers provide a great slew more of them for us to enjoy, too. The detail in the animations and the humour in the script are super - this really is a must watch.

Sep 04, 2024