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How Disney's New 'Jungle Book' Can Overcome Book's Racist Baggage

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  • How Disney's New 'Jungle Book' Can Overcome Book's Racist Baggage




    Of all the films Disney has dug out of its classics collection closet for the live-action reboot treatment, "The Jungle Book" is by far the most likely to cause the studio worries and strife — as Baloo the Bear might chime.

    Both Rudyard Kipling's original book, which was written from a British colonialist perspective, and Disney's own animated adaptation have long been slammed for having racist overtones. If the studio hopes to overcome these perceptions and offer up a 21st century-friendly rendition this go-round, it'll take a whole lot more work than just punching up the old material with snazzy costumes and new-age visual effects.

    "One of the main reasons that 'The Jungle Book' needs to be rebooted is to fix the things that became controversial not long after it was released in 1967," Robert Thompson, pop culture expert and media professor at Syracuse University, tells Yahoo Movies.

    By giving the green light to the new incarnation, hiring Jon Favreau to direct, and tapping a diverse group of A-listers to star – recent Oscar winner Lupita Nyong'o ("12 Years a Slave") and Scarlett Johansson ("Avengers: Age of Ultron") are in talks to join Idris Elba ("Mandela: Long Walk to Freedom") on the developing cast list – Thompson suspects Disney is up to the task and must believe the material "is salvageable."
    So, what are some of the "Bare Necessities" of a "Jungle Book" overhaul?

    "The first Disney 'Jungle Book' was based on Kipling; the next one will be based on the movie, so it'll be another generation removed from Kipling, which will help," Thompson says.

    Stepping away from Kipling's imperialist vision is, however, just the beginning, especially since it was one of the House of Mouse's own story concoctions which caused the most discontent over their first adaptation.

    The cartoon's King Louie (which did not stem from the pages of Kipling's original) was a jazzy ape whose language skills were considered much less refined than those of the film's other animals and who sang "I Wanna Be Like You" to the orphaned human boy Mowgli. The character is widely panned as exemplifying "negative racial stereotyping" and connoting inequality between African-Americans and Caucasians.

    While filmmakers initially tried to sidestep perceptions of racism with King Louie by casting an Italian-American singer (Louis Prima) in the role rather than Louis Armstrong, whom the part was originally written for, the character still strongly violated the ethos of social progress.

    "King Louie was going to be a problem either way," opines Thompson. "The original choice would have been offensive – Louis Armstrong animated as an ape. The choice they went with had a minstrel show feel to it, also offensive."

    Simply whitewash-casting the unfortunately caricaturish character wasn't nearly enough to mask the inherent problems with King Louie the first time around, and it certainly will not work for Disney's renewal. Instead, there'll need to be some fundamental adjustments made – though experts caution against a complete disavowal of the banana-loving primate.

    "The King Louie character can have his speaking mannerisms updated in a way that suggests he speaks in a manner similar to the other characters," Jeffrey M. McCall, Professor of Communication at DePauw University, tells Yahoo Movies. "I don't think the upcoming film needs a total scrubbing, or at some point it would no longer be loyal to the original story. But it can be updated with a keener eye to avoiding stereotypical language or behaviors that could be translatable to ethnic definition."

    While Disney might not need to scrap King Louie altogether to progress, his performance of the hot-button scat tune "I Wanna Be Like You" might be ripe for total lyrical retooling, if not removal altogether. One can only imagine the outrage that would invariably follow if lines like "I wanna be like you/I wanna walk like you/Talk like you, too/You'll see it's true/An ape like me/Can learn to be human too" remained intact in the new take. That'd prick a few raw paws for sure.

    Meanwhile, another big point of action might be to redress the controversial "Jungle Book" plot point of young Mowgli being told he could not live with Baloo the Bear because different species should keep to themselves. Given the historical framework of the film's mid-'60s release, smack dab in the middle of the U.S. Civil Rights Movement, this was perceived as heavily suggestive of pro-segregation principles. Perhaps Favreau and screenwriter Justin Marks could just conjure up another narrative direction altogether for plucking Mowgli away from the wild to avoid this particularly messy aspect.

    It's worth noting that the new "Jungle Book" flick won't just have to overcome the issues of racism plaguing the 1967 animated version. The movie was also quite problematic for those who decried the lack of central female characters (there were just three, and one didn't even speak). With its recent casting decisions, though, it looks like Disney just may have a remedy for that issue by way of some simple swapping.

    While Nyong'o's role as the mother wolf Rachka was one of the three femmes included in the original, Johansson's part as the hypnotic python Kaa was originally voiced by a man. (On a similar note of diversification, Idris Elba's role as the villainous tiger Shere Khan belonged to a white actor in the prior version.)

    To supplement, if needed, the film could also take a leaf from the playbook of theatrical director Mary Zimmerman, who recently revived "The Jungle Book" for the stage and added in a few new animal characters in order to narrow the gender gap.

    Disney's live-action and CGI hybrid re-imagining of "The Jungle Book," one of two modern-day re-tellings of the Rudyard Kipling adventure tale current underway, will hit theaters on Oct. 29, 2015. The other, housed by Warner Bros., will be helmed by Andy Serkis and has no firm release date at this time.


    More at Link
    May we raise children who love the unloved things - the dandelion, the worm, the spiderlings.
    Children who sense the rose needs the thorn and run into rainswept days the same way they turn towards the sun...
    And when they're grown and someone has to speak for those who have no voice,
    may they draw upon that wilder bond, those days of tending tender things and be the one.

  • #2
    One of my best childhood memories was going with my family, all ten of us, to see this movie in the theatre. I was in 6th grade. I had no idea that it was racist and sexist. I was so naive. All I really remember was my jazz-loving-Mr Rogers-dad loved the music, bought the record album, and would entertain us kids by dancing to it with my mom.
    May we raise children who love the unloved things - the dandelion, the worm, the spiderlings.
    Children who sense the rose needs the thorn and run into rainswept days the same way they turn towards the sun...
    And when they're grown and someone has to speak for those who have no voice,
    may they draw upon that wilder bond, those days of tending tender things and be the one.

    Comment


    • #3
      Maybe King Louie should open up with "yo, yo, yo dawg... How things be hangin' in da hood?" and Mowgli could come back with "Its cool. Me an my homie's just knockin' back some sizzrup lookin for some crackas to go all knock out on their azz."
      We are so fucked.

      Comment


      • #4
        I can go along with the problems found in the Kipling original. Kipling's attitude toward non-whites ranged from casual contempt to a sort of demeaning paternalism. The Disney version? Sorry, I don't see the racism.

        There are basically 2 humans and the rest are singing animals. The connection between apes and African-Americans is one that I doubt the current generation this movie targets would even make. Certainly HRH didn't, and Jungle Book is one of her favorite Disney movies. Whatever the original casting intentions, that King Louie calls Mowgli "cousin" (IIRC) always struck me as more of a Darwinian commentary than a racial one.

        Disney's Jungle Book is the quintessential childhood fantasy: a world in which there are friendly, protective animals, something scary, an animal hero and NO ADULTS. That's the thrust of the story. The music is fabulous, and the remake cannot possibly be as good as the original. If "I Wanna Be Like You" doesn't get you up and dancing, you're either deaf or dead.
        "Since the historic ruling, the Lovings have become icons for equality. Mildred released a statement on the 40th anniversary of the ruling in 2007: 'I am proud that Richard’s and my name is on a court case that can help reinforce the love, the commitment, the fairness, and the family that so many people, Black or white, young or old, gay or straight, seek in life. I support the freedom to marry for all. That’s what Loving, and loving, are all about.'." - Mildred Loving (Loving v. Virginia)

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        • #5
          Originally posted by Michele View Post
          One of my best childhood memories was going with my family, all ten of us, to see this movie in the theatre. I was in 6th grade. I had no idea that it was racist and sexist. I was so naive. All I really remember was my jazz-loving-Mr Rogers-dad loved the music, bought the record album, and would entertain us kids by dancing to it with my mom.
          I never thought the ape part was racist. It's sort of a natural that an ape, which is so close to human, be somewhat less than human. And oh boy, would it have been incredible to have Louis Armstrong in that part. Boy I love his voice.
          Not where I breathe, but where I love, I live...
          Robert Southwell, S.J.

          Comment


          • #6
            Originally posted by Celeste Chalfonte View Post
            I can go along with the problems found in the Kipling original. Kipling's attitude toward non-whites ranged from casual contempt to a sort of demeaning paternalism. The Disney version? Sorry, I don't see the racism.

            There are basically 2 humans and the rest are singing animals. The connection between apes and African-Americans is one that I doubt the current generation this movie targets would even make. Certainly HRH didn't, and Jungle Book is one of her favorite Disney movies. Whatever the original casting intentions, that King Louie calls Mowgli "cousin" (IIRC) always struck me as more of a Darwinian commentary than a racial one.

            Disney's Jungle Book is the quintessential childhood fantasy: a world in which there are friendly, protective animals, something scary, an animal hero and NO ADULTS. That's the thrust of the story. The music is fabulous, and the remake cannot possibly be as good as the original. If "I Wanna Be Like You" doesn't get you up and dancing, you're either deaf or dead.
            I think most kids don't see racism. It's adults that see it. Kids see different and it's just different. It's not due to an "ism". If left to their own devices kids would be just fine with the other races, religions, sexes, etc.
            Not where I breathe, but where I love, I live...
            Robert Southwell, S.J.

            Comment


            • #7
              Originally posted by phillygirl View Post
              I never thought the ape part was racist. It's sort of a natural that an ape, which is so close to human, be somewhat less than human. And oh boy, would it have been incredible to have Louis Armstrong in that part. Boy I love his voice.
              I love Louis Armstrong, but I think Louie Prima was perfect for the part. I grew up dancing to Louie Prima and Keely Smith, who were among my parents' favorite artists. Their jazzy, good-time style is perfect for King Louie.

              That was casting right up there with Jeremy Irons as Scar in The Lion King.
              "Since the historic ruling, the Lovings have become icons for equality. Mildred released a statement on the 40th anniversary of the ruling in 2007: 'I am proud that Richard’s and my name is on a court case that can help reinforce the love, the commitment, the fairness, and the family that so many people, Black or white, young or old, gay or straight, seek in life. I support the freedom to marry for all. That’s what Loving, and loving, are all about.'." - Mildred Loving (Loving v. Virginia)

              Comment


              • #8
                Originally posted by Celeste Chalfonte View Post
                I love Louis Armstrong, but I think Louie Prima was perfect for the part. I grew up dancing to Louie Prima and Keely Smith, who were among my parents' favorite artists. Their jazzy, good-time style is perfect for King Louie.

                That was casting right up there with Jeremy Irons as Scar in The Lion King.
                The movie is a bit foggy to me now. I just really love Armstrong. What a wonderful world brings me to tears every time. For some reason he reminds me of my grandfather and my grandfather's singing voice...a little gruff but smooooth. I loved to hear my grandfather sing. I only have him on one tape...at my sister's wedding. I'll have to dig that out and see if I can get it recorded in digital. Unfortunately, I'm singing along, with ruins it.
                Not where I breathe, but where I love, I live...
                Robert Southwell, S.J.

                Comment


                • #9
                  I think Celeste is correct. The ape character wants to be like Mowgli because he's close but not quite there - he's a "cousin". I had no idea monkey/apes stood in for blacks in a stereotypical way until it was explained at college and even then I assumed it was something confined to the East Coast or the South.

                  The lack of female characters is meaningless to me and to most kids. I never wanted to be any of the animals; I wanted to be Mowgli and run around in a jungle full of talking animals. The fact that I was a girl made no difference at all since I shrewdly understood that animals didn't talk and Mowgli was a fictional character.

                  I think it's laugh-out-funny that people are concerned about the racist message instead of concerned about missing the cultural point of the book: you should find your own people and stick with them. Isn't that the central tenet of identity politics? Celebrate your own culture? Look to your own people? Find your real home?

                  Mowgli's problem is that he isn't an animal. Sure, Wolf Mom saved him but he's not a wolf or a monkey or a tiger. The whole story is about gently (and not so gently) shoving Mowgli out of the jungle and into the village.
                  "Alexa, slaughter the fatted calf."

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Originally posted by Gingersnap View Post
                    I think Celeste is correct. The ape character wants to be like Mowgli because he's close but not quite there - he's a "cousin". I had no idea monkey/apes stood in for blacks in a stereotypical way until it was explained at college and even then I assumed it was something confined to the East Coast or the South.

                    The lack of female characters is meaningless to me and to most kids. I never wanted to be any of the animals; I wanted to be Mowgli and run around in a jungle full of talking animals. The fact that I was a girl made no difference at all since I shrewdly understood that animals didn't talk and Mowgli was a fictional character.

                    I think it's laugh-out-funny that people are concerned about the racist message instead of concerned about missing the cultural point of the book: you should find your own people and stick with them. Isn't that the central tenet of identity politics? Celebrate your own culture? Look to your own people? Find your real home?

                    Mowgli's problem is that he isn't an animal. Sure, Wolf Mom saved him but he's not a wolf or a monkey or a tiger. The whole story is about gently (and not so gently) shoving Mowgli out of the jungle and into the village.
                    See now the simple type like me thought that this story was one about finding friends and seeing friends as family. Now I might not be as educated or as well-traveled as those who don't like this story, but I'm pretty sure that my biological sisters weren't the ones guarding me in Somalia and they certainly aren't the ones willing to take a bullet for me today.

                    But that's just my ignorance talking I guess.
                    "Faith is nothing but a firm assent of the mind : which, if it be regulated, as is our duty, cannot be afforded to anything but upon good reason, and so cannot be opposite to it."
                    -John Locke

                    "It's all been melded together into one giant, authoritarian, leftist scream."
                    -Newman

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                    • #11

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                      • #12
                        Originally posted by RobJohnson View Post
                        LOL! Look who's on the leash being fed by an angry and possibly demented owner who may shortly die. What will Fido do when the Gravy Train stops?
                        "Alexa, slaughter the fatted calf."

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          It'll be fun of Disney ever brings back Song of the South. Maybe they can get Samuel L. Jackson to play Uncle Remus.




                          Better still: Lawrence Fishburne.

                          "What if I told you that I was going to throw you in that briar patch?"


                          It's been ten years since that lonely day I left you
                          In the morning rain, smoking gun in hand
                          Ten lonely years but how my heart, it still remembers
                          Pray for me, momma, I'm a gypsy now

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            I actually own 'The Song of the South' on a Japanese laser disc.

                            Protip: It's really a bunch of trickster stories with animated animals and human actors that makes clueless white people look a little dumb.
                            "Alexa, slaughter the fatted calf."

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Originally posted by Gingersnap View Post
                              I actually own 'The Song of the South' on a Japanese laser disc.

                              Protip: It's really a bunch of trickster stories with animated animals and human actors that makes clueless white people look a little dumb.
                              Now I'm kinda liking Samuel Jackson again: "Git inna briar patch, motherfucker!"
                              It's been ten years since that lonely day I left you
                              In the morning rain, smoking gun in hand
                              Ten lonely years but how my heart, it still remembers
                              Pray for me, momma, I'm a gypsy now

                              Comment

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