Jumanji

1996

Seasons & Episodes

  • 3
  • 2
  • 1

EP13 An Old Story aka (Bark At Jumanji) Nov 30, 1998

6.3| 0h30m| TV-Y7| en
Synopsis

Judy and Peter Shepherd are two kids that found a board game called "Jumanji". With each turn, the two of them are given a "game clue" and then sucked into a dangerous jungle until they solve their clue. There they meet Alan Parrish, who was trapped in the Jumanji jungle because he had never seen his clue.

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Trailers & Clips

Reviews

Matialth Good concept, poorly executed.
Intcatinfo A Masterpiece!
Juana what a terribly boring film. I'm sorry but this is absolutely not deserving of best picture and will be forgotten quickly. Entertaining and engaging cinema? No. Nothing performances with flat faces and mistaking silence for subtlety.
Scarlet The film never slows down or bores, plunging from one harrowing sequence to the next.
Foreverisacastironmess Ok so I'm pretty sure that if there was one thing that caused some people to take an immediate dislike to this show it would have to be the visual style and character designs, everything is so jagged and overly-exaggerated and the shape of the characters is so bendy and weird. Even as I kid I was annoyed at first by how ugly and radically different the characters were to their live-action counterparts, but once you get used to the funny look of everything it does give the show a distinctive quirky charm and tone. One little visual touch I think they made a mistake with though was in giving just about every animal sharp monster teeth, even the birds! I know it was probably just to make the perilous wildlife of Jumanji more frightening and fantastical, but the fangs were dumb guys, sorry! And the writing wasn't the wittiest ever but I thought the ideas of a lot of the episodes were fairly clever in how the challenge that they had to overcome was always built around the most wonderful rhyming clues, I wonder if the show's writers wrote down a lot of those profound limericks and then picked them out of a hat and decided how'd they'd construct a specific around the chosen clue. One of the best episodes is when they journey through the desert and find the fortress of one who declares himself the master of Jumanji, only for him to turn out to be just another lost player who never figured out his clue, and who with our heroes help eventually solves it by giving up on ever solving it, his clue being "Try as you might to escape your fate, you'll never pass through the gateless gate." Again the characters aren't the most super-interesting ever but they do grow on you, and by the end you really do care about them and want Alan to be freed from the game, which he finally is in the last episode, which I find to be a more satisfying ending than the one in the movie. I find that this series does a greater job of building on the world of Jumanji and really brings it to life, for me it took what I loved best about the movie and expanded on it, we get to see those "things you'll only see in your nightmares" and a lot more, it was awesome how it explored the lore without ever directly spelling out what it's really meant to mean, with Van Pelt's "hunt or be hunted" outlook seeming to sum it up. I loved the new villains and characters that they introduced, especially Tim Curry as the hilariously avaricious and tricky to deal with Trader Slick, who wasn't a villain exactly, although his items often proved to do the gang more harm than good! Another really cool new character was the seldom-seen Grim Reaper like Stalker who emerges from the fiery mechanical underworld of Jumanji whenever the game itself is threatened, now for an animated series he was just plain scary! So it's not a perfect show or quite as great as I once remembered, but it is still fun and inventive adventure to watch and definitely worth rediscovering as an unsung gem of a series from back in the day. Very cool beans! X
mat9813004 For its time it was a pretty good children's cartoon. The artwork was edgy and the theme music was engaging, the creatures looked pretty scary/sinister and the rules based, cause and effect reality created by the Jumanji game gave the environment character and some of the malevolent characters a certain pathos. Professor Ibsen in the episode Master Builder was a direct reference to the Norwegian playwright Henrick Ibsen, who wrote a play called Master Builder and contains parallels to the character. Tim Curry is the voice to Slick.Favorite episodes include Armageddon, where the rules of Jumanji begin to break down and Branford, a game version of the "real world" where Peter and Judy come from.
Jackson Booth-Millard If you have seen the movie starring Robin Williams about the jungle themed game with a mind of its own, then you'll love the cartoon TV series. From the makers of Aaagh! Real Monsters, Angry Beavers and Hey Arnold! Nickelodean, this cartoon was made after the film and shown on CITV. Basically Judy and Peter go into the game every day and solve puzzles to try and get their jungle friend Alan Parrish out of the game. Obviously the things in the jungle are trying to stop them from doing this, e.g. Van Pelt (from film). There were some new characters in the cartoon that were pretty good too, e.g. Trader Slick (who looks like Batman's Joker). Good!
dw07us This was one of the best cartoon series I ever saw. I don't see why it isn't on television anymore. On the last episode, it was nice how Alan finally made it out of Jumanji. I would love it if they put this back on t.v. I use to watch it every mourning. The reason why more people didn't watch it was because not too many kids knew about the show. It wasn't being promoted enough. If it got promoted more than kids would be going crazy over this show. This was the kind of cartoon that keeps you glued to your sit. I will always remember this cartoon, Jumanji, that I used to watch when I was a younger kid. They need to put this back on national television so that the kids can have something better to watch.