Movies

Jumanji Welcome To The Jungle review: Far from a classic but don’t write it off

The Rock is an obvious highlight (Picture: Sony)

Fans of the all-time classic adventure movie Jumanji were left shook when it was confirmed that 22 years later, the film would get a sequel.

Luckily, there wasn’t too much to worry about as Jumanji: Welcome To The Jungle is a fun action comedy movie, that works as a standalone movie – and certainly isn’t going to ruin any childhoods.

The new Jumanji sees four students sucked into the game after discovering a dusty old game console in their school’s basement during detention – oh, yeah, Jumanji is no longer a board game, it’s a video game – although how it became a game cartridge is explained in a scene which seems like a hastily thrown together afterthought, even though it comes in the first two minutes of the movie.

However, Jumanji needed to be a video game to actually make the sequel current – and it’s the video game aspects of Welcome To The Jungle that actually make it funny.

The students choose avatars before they get sucked into the telly, and are transformed into the characters they chose. Thus, the nerdy boy becomes Dr Smolder Bravestone (played by Dwayne ‘The Rock’ Johnson), the jock becomes diminutive zoologist Franklin ‘Mouse’ Finbar (Kevin Hart), the quiet girl is transformed into kickass femme fatale Ruby Roundhouse (Karen Gillan), and the Instagram-obsessed popular girl is transformed into a ‘curvy’ cartographer called Professor Shelly Oberon, played by Jack Black.

Jumanji cast
The film is far from a classic but raises a few laughs (Picture: Sony)

The tropes of gaming are lovingly lampooned throughout the movie. Karen Gillan’s Ruby Roundhouse is wearing tiny short shorts and a leather halter top in the jungle – the ridiculous costume is mocked straight away – and flies through the air to perform karate.

The background characters keep repeating themselves as they only have pre-programmed stock phrases in their vocabulary, and The Rock gets super intense and sexy everytime he says something dramatic.

This trope mockery leads to the best laughs in the film, and feel fresh and clever – unlike Jack Black’s portrayal of a teenage girl, where the jokes on selfie culture and millenial slang seem rather tired.

The cast – who genuinely seem to be having a blast – do the best with the body-swap material they’re given, though, with Johnson in particular drawing smiles in every scene (no surprises there).

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I do wonder who this film is for, though. Body swaps and adventures are definitely in the kids market, but the graphic nature in which the avatars can lose their lives – exploding, being eaten by hippos – are a bit too violent for young cinemagoers.

Any 90s babies, though, will feel all warm and fuzzy when they see the understated tribute to Robin Williams’ character Alan Parrish.

All in all, Jumanji: Welcome To The Jungle won’t achieve classic status like the original – but it’s far from a franchise-ruiner, and in this day and age of dodgy remakes, that’s all we can really hope for.

Jumanji: Welcome To The Jungle is out 20 December.

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