Baltimore Sun Sunday

‘Jungle Cruise’ film brought change to ride

Disneyland staple gets a number of progressiv­e tweaks

- By Todd Martens

LOS ANGELES — A single Instagram post in 2017 caused a momentary panic in the Disney community.

Dwayne Johnson, standing in front of a Herb Ryman-drawn map of the initial proposal for Disneyland, stated that he and his production company were partnering with Walt Disney Imagineeri­ng — the secretive division of the company responsibl­e for theme park experience­s — to “reengineer and redesign” the Jungle Cruise ride, one of Disneyland’s opening-day attraction­s.

Updates to the ride were, of course, long overdue, as numerous scenes contained offensive tribal caricature­s crafted through a colonialis­t lens. Johnson’s Jungle Cruise vision was unknown, and while the attraction, overseen by Walt Disney, had undergone numerous changes over six decades — most designed to add more humor and creatures — would a robotic Rock be on the horizon?

Not quite. Or at least not yet, as the combined box office and Disney+ grosses of the Johnson and Emily Blunt-starring film “Jungle Cruise” will likely determine the audio-animatroni­c possibilit­ies at Disney’s parks around the world. For now, at least, nods to the action-focused blockbuste­r-hopeful with a mystical, “Raiders of the Lost Ark”-influenced tone remain subtle and of the more hidden “Easter egg” variety in the Disneyland original.

“When you meet these behind-the-scenes heroes, it’s an extraordin­ary experience,” says Johnson of his time at Imagineeri­ng,

before offering an ever-so-slight tease that more tweaks could be on the horizon. “Hopefully, there’s parts of our movie that might influence the ride just a little bit going forward.”

It wouldn’t be the first time Disneyland’s Jungle Cruise has taken inspiratio­n from cinema. The original attraction was sprung from Disney’s own nature documentar­ies as well as the 1951 classic “The African Queen,” starring Humphrey Bogart and Katharine Hepburn, which is also a clear influence on the big-screen “Jungle Cruise.” In theaters and on Disney+ premier access, audiences can see for themselves what a Johnson Jungle Cruise looks like in the Jaume Collet-Serradirec­ted film. If the ride is a leisurely, throwback antidote to modern thrill and special effects-laden attraction­s, the film aims to be exactly the opposite.

And this 2021 take on “Jungle Cruise” — rooted in the chemistry, bickering and exaggerate­d contradict­ions between Johnson’s cynical skipper Frank and Blunt’s idealistic botanist Lily — did present an opportunit­y to bring modern sensibilit­ies to the Disneyland original.

The action-comedy adventure, filmed in

Hawaii but located in a fictionali­zed Amazon, set out to course-correct some of the Jungle Cruise ride’s more uncomforta­ble aspects. Gone are implicatio­ns of Westerners as superior colonizers, as well as grotesque depictions of Indigenous people as tourist attraction­s, attackers or cannibals. The villains here include an army of undead Spanish conquistad­ors who tried and failed to wield the jungle to their needs — namely, an attempt to raid a tree with healing powers.

“What we wanted to represent about the ride

was that joy and nostalgia,” says Blunt. “It pierces your heart directly. But ... we want to represent it sensitivel­y and respectful­ly.”

Over the last decade, Disney has been more aggressive about removing cultural stereotype­s from its attraction­s. In 2017, Disneyland gave women agency in its Pirates of the Caribbean attraction by removing a bridal auction scene and re-imagining a female “wench” as a pirate, and last year the company pledged to remake the “Song of the South”-referencin­g Splash Mountain into an attraction inspired by “The Princess and the Frog,” which stars the company’s first Black princess, Tiana.

With a major Jungle Cruise-inspired film on the horizon, the timing was right to rethink the Disneyland original. The re-imagined ride largely doubles down on slapstick-inspired scenes involving chimpanzee­s

and monkeys getting the best of a prior Jungle Cruise expedition.

“From our talks with the Imagineers, what was so interestin­g is that they’ve been wanting to redo the ride for a long time,” says Beau Flynn, a producer on the film. “But it’s the most revered, and the most nostalgic, and no one would let them. Every generation wanted the same experience. So the Imagineers were like, ‘Thank God for this movie, because it gives the opportunit­y to make changes we’ve wanted to make.’ ”

The film has some clever solutions for some of the ride’s outmoded — and now removed — imagery. Spear-brandishin­g headhunter­s, for instance, are turned into a sly joke that plays with Western stereotype­s. Screenwrit­er Michael Green (“Logan,” “Blade Runner 2049”), who joined the project in late 2017, said the filmmakers wanted to reframe some of the ride’s unsavory aspects, a benefit of cinema that one doesn’t get via the pure environmen­tal storytelli­ng in a theme park attraction.

The film makes a number of additional progressiv­e tweaks.

The character of Trader Sam, the tribesman who will trade “two of his heads for one of yours” was removed from the ride but lives on in “Jungle Cruise,” portrayed as a mysterious, entreprene­urial figure by Veronica Falcón.

And, in a moment sure to further the debate on how Disney handles its LGBTQ characters, the film contains a coming-out scene for Lily’s brother, MacGregor (Jack Whitehall), in conversati­on with Frank.

While not exactly subtle, the moment is not specifical­ly direct either, as MacGregor notes that he was ostracized from much of his family for his romantic interests leaning “elsewhere.”

If characters in “Jungle Cruise” are broadly drawn, that’s very much by design.

Blunt’s Lily, for instance, is presented as a hardened adventurer, and the mysteries of Johnson’s Frank are played down until a surprise reveal late in the film. In the modern era of filmmaking, where every detail tends to be overly explained, those working on “Jungle Cruise” say there are lessons to be learned from theme park attraction­s, where audiences are escorted from scene to scene and fill in the blanks via our imaginatio­n.

“We wanted to make sure we were honoring the ride, making sure it wasn’t too dark, but making sure it was humorous,” says producer Dany Garcia. “It’s very similar to the history of the Haunted Mansion (attraction), where you have multiple points of view. It was the same way for us.”

 ?? ALLEN J. SCHABEN/LOS ANGELES TIMES ?? An expedition’s wrecked boat that was taken over by chimpanzee­s during the Jungle Cruise ride July 9 at Disneyland in Anaheim, California. The film set out to correct some of the ride’s more uncomforta­ble aspects.
ALLEN J. SCHABEN/LOS ANGELES TIMES An expedition’s wrecked boat that was taken over by chimpanzee­s during the Jungle Cruise ride July 9 at Disneyland in Anaheim, California. The film set out to correct some of the ride’s more uncomforta­ble aspects.

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