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The Rock, Blunt anchor Disney’s ‘Jungle Cruise’

RODNEY HO

ATLANTA—On paper, creating a movie based on a Disney amusement park ride seems like an idea destined for failure.

But then “Pirates of the Caribbean” became a smash hit in 2003 and generated four sequels and a crazy $4.5 billion (U.S.) in worldwide gross.

So turning the popular Jungle Cruise ride into a film became a dangling possibility in the minds of Disney executives. For a time, Tim Allen and Tom Hanks of “Toy Story” fame were attached to the idea. But as is often the case in Hollywood, it took a long time to find the right people for “Jungle Cruise” to become an actual film.

The key get: swashbuckling Alist actor Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson and his production company signing on in 2015. But it still took two more years to cobble together a usable script and land British actress Emily Blunt (“Mary Poppins,” “A Quiet Place”) as Johnson’s verbal sparring partner and love interest.

“Jungle Cruise,” set in 1916, features pun-loving Amazonian jungle cruise operator Frank (Johnson), feminist adventurer and doctor Lily (Blunt), and Lily’s peevishly protective brother MacGregor (British comic Jack Whitehall).

Lily is seeking the legendary Tree of Life, whose petals provide an elixir for any illness. Of course, “Indiana Jones”-style, a grandiose German aristocrat Prince Joachim played by Jesse Plemons (“Breaking Bad”) with arched eyebrow and cartoonish accent is chasing after the same prize. And there’s a third rival: 400-year-old conquistador spirit types led by Aguirre (Edgar Ramirez). Throw in a jaguar as Frank’s sidekick and this world is sufficiently fantastical.

But ultimately, the plot is secondary to the snarky interplay among the main characters that signal this film is a bumpy, but ultimately family-friendly, ride with a preordained cheerful ending.

In interviews, Johnson has said “Jungle Cruise” pays homage to the original 1981 classic “Raiders of the Lost Ark,” the 1984 madcap Michael Douglas and Kathleen Turner hit “Romancing the Stone,” and 1951’s Humphrey Bogart and Katharine Hepburn classic “African Queen,” which the ride was loosely based on.

“We really wanted to build this fun romantic tension and banter between Frank and Lily,” said executive producer Hiram Garcia in an interview with the Atlanta Journal-Constitution. “Emily is a smaller version of Dwayne. They both love to bust chops and play games.”

Some film critics so far have found “Jungle Cruise” derivative, but others lauded the sparkling chemistry among the main characters.

Success is hardly a slam dunk during this uncertain time, as the Delta variant has driven a spike in COVID-19 cases. Disney hedged its bets by releasing this film simultaneously in theatres and on Disney Plus for an added $34.99.

Nevertheless, the “Jungle Cruise” cast and producers were able to host a traditional red-carpet Hollywood screening earlier in the week at Disneyland in Anaheim, Calif., with a full theatre of whooping fans.

The $200-million film was produced partly in Hawaii, where they built an entire Brazilian village on a river and choreographed an elaborate submarine/boat chase. The bulk of the film was shot in Georgia, much of it on the backlots of Atlanta’s Blackhall Studios before the pandemic. This meant re-creating realistic jungle and cave scenes as well as an animatronic boat surrounded by green screens.

“Being on that boat was like being on a roller coaster,” said Whitehall, who is relatively unknown stateside. “All those scenes of us being thrown around and my character looking like he’s going to throw up? That was very real.”

And the summer Atlanta heat didn’t do Whitehall any favours because his snooty MacGregor character was dressed in fancy early 20th-century British garb in the jungle.

“They were thick suits, cut for people in England,” he said. “I remember one particular day I had been to Fox Bros. Bar-B-Q in Atlanta and overindulged. The next day, I had a bad case of the meat sweats.”

Whitehall had never met fellow Brit Blunt until they did a screen test in New York in 2018. “We found out we lived in a similar area of London, our mums shared the same hairdresser, we became fast friends,” he said. “I feel honoured to call her a friend.”

But Blunt knew very little about Johnson’s past. “I had to teach her quite a lot about his wrestling career,” Whitehall said. At one point, he demonstrated a signature Rock wrestling move on her called “the Rock Bottom.”

Johnson himself had yet to say hi to Whitehall at that point but saw “me Rock-Bottoming Mary Poppins,” he said, “which was quite the introduction.”

ENTERTAINMENT

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2021-07-31T07:00:00.0000000Z

2021-07-31T07:00:00.0000000Z

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