The Jungle Book - crew, film crew

The entire team, the film crew of the film "The Jungle Book"
The Jungle Book (2016)
Timing: 1:46 (106 min)
The Jungle Book - TMDB rating
6.87/10
8452
The Jungle Book - Kinopoisk rating
7.144/10
129736
The Jungle Book - IMDB rating
7.3/10
305000

Film crew

Director

Producer

Brigham Taylor
Producer

Executive Producer

Peter M. Tobyansen
Executive Producer
Photo Karen Gilchrist #15713
Karen Gilchrist
Executive Producer
Molly Allen
Executive Producer

Editor

Mark Livolsi
Editor

Art Direction

John Lord Booth III
Art Direction
Ravi Bansal
Art Direction

Supervising Art Director

Andrew L. Jones
Supervising Art Director

Costume Design

Photo Laura Jean Shannon #67335
Laura Jean Shannon
Costume Design

Production Design

Christopher Glass
Production Design

Stunt Coordinator

Photo Casey OPhoto Casey OPhoto Casey O

Casey O'Neill

Casey O'Neill
Stunt Coordinator

Set Decoration

Amanda Moss Serino
Set Decoration

Key Makeup Artist

George Black
Key Makeup Artist

Sound Re-Recording Mixer

Photo Lora Hirschberg #8239
Lora Hirschberg
Sound Re-Recording Mixer

Original Music Composer

Photo John Debney #11479Photo John Debney #11480

John Debney

John Debney
Original Music Composer

Unit Production Manager

David H. Venghaus Jr.
Unit Production Manager
David M. Bernstein
Unit Production Manager

Co-Producer

Joyce Cox
Co-Producer
Photo John Bartnicki #68487
John Bartnicki
Co-Producer

Orchestrator

Photo Kevin Kaska #8633
Kevin Kaska
Orchestrator

Second Assistant Director

Gregory J. Pawlik Jr.
Second Assistant Director

Director of Photography

Photo Bill Pope #8934

Bill Pope

Bill Pope
Director of Photography

Sound Effects Editor

David Chrastka

David Chrastka
Sound Effects Editor

Visual Effects Supervisor

Adam Valdez
Visual Effects Supervisor
Dan Lemmon
Visual Effects Supervisor
Robert Legato
Visual Effects Supervisor

Supervising Sound Editor

Frank E. Eulner

Frank E. Eulner
Supervising Sound Editor
Photo Christopher Boyes #326931

Christopher Boyes

Christopher Boyes
Supervising Sound Editor

Hair Department Head

Marie Larkin
Hair Department Head

Animation Supervisor

Paul Story
Animation Supervisor
Photo Andrew R. Jones #15551
Andrew R. Jones
Animation Supervisor

First Assistant Director

David H. Venghaus Jr.
First Assistant Director

Screenplay

Novel

Lighting Technician

Key Hair Stylist

Bryn E. Leetch
Key Hair Stylist

Visual Effects Production Manager

Bruce Franklin
Visual Effects Production Manager

Compositor

Bryan Bartlett
Compositor

Special Effects Makeup Artist

Margie Kaklamanos
Special Effects Makeup Artist

Songs

Music

Storyboard Artist

Phil Langone
Storyboard Artist

Concept Artist

In Memory Of

Casting Director

Visual Effects Editor

Mark S. Wright
Visual Effects Editor

Effects Supervisor

Alexander Nowotny
Effects Supervisor

Conceptual Design

Seth Engstrom
Conceptual Design

Studio Teacher

Lois Yaroshefsky
Studio Teacher

Assistant Production Coordinator

Sally Potters
Assistant Production Coordinator

Production Executive

Tina L. Newman
Production Executive

Producer's Assistant

Meghan Malloy
Producer's Assistant

Senior Animator

Sidney Kombo
Senior Animator
Ludovic Chailloleau
Senior Animator

What's left behind the scenes

  • The character Baloo is voiced by Bill Murray. In the film "The Jungle Book: Mowgli's Story" (1998), this same character was voiced by his older brother, Brian Doyle-Murray.
  • For the first time in history, Kaa is portrayed as a female character.
  • When creating the images of talking animals, the habits of real animals were used, which the actors had to copy using so-called motion capture technology.
  • This is the fourth joint project between director Jon Favreau and composer John Debney. They previously worked together on the films "Elf" (2003), "Zathura: A Space Adventure" (2005), and "Iron Man 2" (2010).
  • The wolf cubs in the film are named after the actors and other members of the film crew.
  • Baloo whistles the song "The Bare Necessities" from the 1967 Disney cartoon.
  • A remake of the 1967 cartoon as a live-action film with elements of computer animation. The authors have made some changes to it, including episodes from Rudyard Kipling's book in the plot to make the narrative more engaging.
  • All locations used in the film were created using computer graphics.
  • In the cartoon "The Jungle Book" (1967), King Louie is depicted as an orangutan. In the film, he will be a gigantopithecus. It is believed that these ancestors of orangutans inhabited some parts of India. The filmmakers preferred the gigantopithecus to make the film more fantastic and because orangutans do not live in India.
  • This is the first joint work of Scarlett Johansson and Bill Murray since the film *Lost in Translation* (2003).
  • This is Christopher Walken's first participation in projects from *Walt Disney Pictures* since the film *The Wild Thornberrys Movie* (2002).
  • Ben Kingsley, Scarlett Johansson, and Idris Elba have starred in films based on *Marvel* comics; Christopher Walken played in *Batman Returns* (1992) based on *DC* comics; Bill Murray participated in the filming of *Garfield* (2004) based on the newspaper comic strip.
  • Giancarlo Esposito, who voices Akela, starred in an advertisement for the computer game *Destiny* (2014), where he read an excerpt from the poem *The Law of the Jungle* from Rudyard Kipling's *The Second Jungle Book*.
  • This is the thirteenth film from *Walt Disney Pictures* for which John Debney composed the music.
  • This was Bill Murray's first film for Walt Disney Pictures. Previously, he had only appeared in films released under the Touchstone Pictures label (a film division of Disney): 'What About Bob?' (1991), 'Ed Wood' (1994), 'Rushmore' (1998), 'Cradle Will Rock' (1999), 'The Royal Tenenbaums' (2001), and 'The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou' (2004). Additionally, Murray became the second actor from 'Ghostbusters' (1984) to play a bear. Dan Aykroyd did so before him in 2010, starring in 'Yogi Bear'.
  • Neil Sethi, who played Mowgli, admitted that he had never filmed with real animals before, and director Jon Favreau sometimes stood in for him – in scenes with animals, and especially with Shere Khan.
  • Motion capture technology was used to create the animal characters, and puppeteers from The Jim Henson Company portrayed them. In addition, it was specialists from The Jim Henson Company who created full-size animal replicas that played in scenes with Mowgli.
  • The volume shown against the end credits is the same one featured at the beginning of the 1967 animated film of the same name. According to director Jon Favreau, this completes the on-screen story of Mowgli, which began in 1967.
  • Over 2,000 children from around the world auditioned for the role of Mowgli. For Neel Sethi, these were his first film auditions ever. He was one of the last candidates John Favreau reviewed. Two weeks later, Sethi had already begun filming.
  • The basis for depicting the animals in the film was largely real wild animals found in India. However, the filmmakers increased the animals' size by approximately 30% (to emphasize Mowgli's weakness and, in general, humanity's unsuitability for life in the jungle). Of course, this only heightened the sense of threat posed by Shere Khan and Kaa. On the other hand, it had exactly the same effect on viewers in terms of the feeling of friendliness associated with the wolf pack or Bagheera. In reality, wolves and leopards that inhabit India are relatively small (an individual is smaller than the average person). Even King Louie appears significantly larger than a real gigantopithecus (these extinct hominids were up to 3 meters tall, while Louie reaches about 4.5 meters).
  • Approximately 1,000 locations in the jungles of India were photographed during pre-production and then used as references during post-production.
  • In Disney's 1967 *The Jungle Book*, King Louie was an orangutan (incidentally, this character was not created by the author of the original Mowgli story, English traveler and writer Rudyard Kipling, but by Disney employees). In this film, Louie is a gigantopithecus, an extinct genus of hominids that inhabited the territories of modern-day India, China, Thailand, and Vietnam. The orangutan was changed to a gigantopithecus to make the whole story even more fantastic, and to show that orangutans are not native to India.
  • Baloo is voiced by Bill Murray. In "The Jungle Book: Mowgli's Story" (1998), the same character was voiced by his older brother, Brian Doyle-Murray.
Did you like the film?

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