Meet Bagheera, the wise old panther, and crazy King Louie the orangutan. But watch out for cunning Shere Khan the tiger and Kaa, the ssssneakiest snake in the jungle. Bursting with wild fun, toe-tapping music and beloved characters, this timeless masterpiece celebrates the true meaning of friendship. Experience all the excitement of Disney's jumpin' Jungle Classic and share the wonder with someone you love. For more about The Jungle Book and the The Jungle Book Blu-ray release, see the published by Kenneth Brown on February 11, 2014 where this Blu-ray release scored 4. Disney's 19th animated feature had a troubled production, with firings, rewrites and changes in direction par for the course. And that the jungle book hindi 1080p blu ray before the death of producer Walt Disney, which came just ten months before its theatrical release. Viewed with a fresh pair of eyes, the film's seams and shortcomings are long past showing, and its storytelling and narrative elasticity prove a bit problematic. It isn't the greatest of Disney's classics, but it's no less accessible or enjoyable today to those who will no doubt cherish it the most: children of all ages. When black panther Bagheera Sebastian Cabot finds a baby boy in a basket in the middle of the jungle, he takes the orphan -- Mowgli Bruce Reitherman -- to a mother wolf, who raise the child as one of her own for the next ten years. But when a bloodthirsty Bengal tiger named Shere Khan George Sanders returns with a taste for man, the wolf pack decides the safest course of action is to send Mowgli back to his people. Bagheera volunteers to escort Mowgli to the closest village; a long walk home that brings the boy across the paths of Baloo the care-free bear Phil HarrisKaa the hypnotic python Sterling Hollowayproud Colonel Hathi J. Pat O'Malley and his elephant patrol, the colonel's wife Verna Felton and son Clint Howardmad King Louie Louis Prima and his army of monkeys, and a quartet of kindly vultures: Dizzie Lord Tim HudsonFlaps Chad StuartZiggy Digby Wolfe and Buzzie O'Malley. But even with Shere Khan tracking him, poor Mowgli isn't convinced he should live with his own kind, or that he belongs anywhere but the jungle. Never mind Mowgli; brave and spunky as he is. The enduring magic of The Jungle Book springs from its motley band of singing, dancing, groovin' animals. Personal childhood favorite TaleSpin 1990-91 certainly knew it. May it rest in peace. Mowgli is really just the displaced vehicle by which we tour Disney's eclectic, electric jungle and through whom we meet its wildly endearing cast of characters. Baloo, every '60s, '70s and '80s kid's best animated pal. Bagheera, faithful and true, even when dangling at his wits' end. Shere Khan, a fiendishly calculating threat whose presence can be felt even when he isn't lurking in the nearby brush. Kaa, creepy, conniving and hilariously cursssssed with bad luck. He's a ton of fun. And while the slow-to-start, quick-to-close adventure that introduces each new ally and enemy sometimes feels a touch too episodic, there's enough forward momentum and catchy songs to make Mowgli's journey one worth taking. Revisiting a beloved film you haven't seen in years is always an interesting exercise, and often reveals an entirely different film. Chalk it up to station in life, experience, tastes. Whatever the cause, there are moments where The Jungle Book is something of a relic of a bygone animation age, and it has very little to do with the sketch-work line art or animation style. One early example: the still-jarring shift from narration to dialogue that occurs within minutes of the title card. It remains a tried and true classic, sure. Kids won't notice, nor will adults wearing critical blinders. Subject The Jungle Book to honest scrutiny, though, and you'll begin to notice the flaws that lie beneath all the humor, toe-tapping tunes and unforgettable beats. Fortunately, that's the joy of being a kid or a kid at heart : grinning and laughing along with a childhood classic on its own terms, not picking it apart piece by piece or getting hung up on what could have been. Watching my son the jungle book hindi 1080p blu ray every minute of The Jungle Book made me envious of his ability to simply love a movie that was loving him right back. It's by no means a failure, and nowhere near the disaster that is the Blu-ray release of The Sword in the Stone. The telltale signs of noise reduction are present, they're just far less glaring and debilitating; almost, almost to the point of being somewhat easy to overlook. Grain has been scrubbed away in its entirety, yes, but the scratchy sketchiness of the animators' line art appears to be intact. Without access to the original elements, one can never be 100% certain. Otherwise, the image impresses and then some. Colors are satisfying and nicely saturated, primaries are quite lovely, black levels are deep, and contrast is dialed in beautifully. There also isn't any significant macroblocking, banding, aliasing or noise to speak of, although a hint of ringing slithers into view from time to time. For the most part, The Jungle Book's presentation will appease the masses, while more stringent purists and videophiles will be slightly disappointed. Particularly those who see Disney's ongoing remastering and restorative practices as unnecessary, overzealous or indifferent to the original texture of a film or the animators and filmmakers' intent. Purists' scores will trend lower. Casual animation fans' scores will trend higher. And neither camp is quote-unquote wrong. It's a matter of preference, and as far as my score is concerned, I'm splitting the difference. No complaints here, other than the obvious: it's overkill. The film's forty-seven-year-old soundscape remains quite flat and front-heavy, albeit precisely as it should. I'll take an accurate, faithful 7. George Burns score and the Sherman Brothers' songs sound better than they ever have, as does the entire experience. It may not challenge your system or rouse the neighbors, but Disney's lossless track certainly gets the job done. Sherman, animator Floyd Norman and the late Diane Disney Miller gather at the Disney Family Museum to reminisce about producer Walt Disney, The Jungle Book's production, animation and songs, and Walt Disney's death. It would have tacked an entire, somewhat over-plotted hunk of story onto the tail end of the film, but I suspect it would have been worth it. Disney Animation Building where key members of the staff discuss Walt Disney's legacy and the studio's ongoing efforts, innovation and the Spark Showcase, an ongoing series of large pitch meetings open the jungle book hindi 1080p blu ray anyone in the studio who has a viable project idea. The Jungle Book has changed over the years. Whether by way of age or the aging of its fans is up for debate, but cracks in the classic are beginning to show. That doesn't mean it isn't a great Disney animated film, or a beloved classic. Just that it isn't the be-all, end-all my nostalgia-drunk brain told me it was before I started watching it again after all these years. Your experience may be completely different, but that's the joy of cinema. Thankfully Disney's Blu-ray release is an easy one to recommend, with only a few caveats. Is this the definitive release of The Jungle Book. That said, here's hoping Disney takes a page from Sony and Warner's playbook and revisits its animated classics in a few years, granting each one a more faithful ground-up overhaul that presents each animated treasure exactly as it was meant to be seen. For the week that ended on February 16th, Disney's The Jungle Book rose to number one on the Blu-ray-only and overall package media rankings. » Show more for The Jungle Book Blu-ray You will get a notification at the top of the site as soon as the current price equals or falls below your price. You can also get an instant mobile notification with our iPhone- or Android app. The apps are synchronized with your account at Blu-ray.