English, asked by narsi, 1 year ago

write a dialogue on this - Your science teacher has announced a special class for Saturday. you and your friends had planned to watch the film THE JUNGLE BOOK and bought tickets. Discuss the action plan with your friends.

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Answered by britneybinu28
3
Ideally, every film should be judged on its own merits. Outside factors — how faithfully a movie adapts its source material, how well it carries on a franchise, how blatantly it feeds the audience’s nostalgia — are ultimately secondary concerns. But the people behind Disney’s live-action remakes have made it awfully hard to respond to their projects entirely based on what’s on the screen. 2014’s Maleficent had awe-inspiring visuals, but borrowed too much of its narrative power from 1959’s Sleeping Beauty, and undermined its mystery in the process. 2015’s Cinderella slathered extra sentiment and a weirdly regressive message over the 1950 animated version. And both films erratically stitch in so many specific bits and pieces of their animated predecessors that they lack their own distinct identities. Above all, both films raise the questions: “Why bother? Why did this need to exist?” 
Jon Favreau’s remake of the 1967 animated Disney classic The Jungle Book has a few identity problems of its own. But the director of Iron Man and Iron Man 2 largely follows his own path here, with a confidence and freedom the previous two remakes lack. His Jungle Book is the first of Disney’s “brand deposit remakes” that isn’t just an inferior retread of an enshrined classic.

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