AniInterview
Sorry, this movie sucks
TrueHello
Fun premise, good actors, bad writing. This film seemed to have potential at the beginning but it quickly devolves into a trite action film. Ultimately it's very boring.
Ava-Grace Willis
Story: It's very simple but honestly that is fine.
Yazmin
Close shines in drama with strong language, adult themes.
Midnight Sun
This show was a mess. Whereas the book and movie took place in the real world, this show mostly plays out within Jumanji itself, which is a great concept brimming with potential. Unfortunately, little of note was done with it.The writers do introduce us to a biologically diverse world with jungles, deserts, oceans and ruined temples, populated by giant, dangerous animals (Amusingly, everything has carnivorous teeth, even the insects.) and introduce new villains as well. Each show follows the same simple formula: Judy and Peter get sucked into the game (which happens every time they roll the dice), get chased by animals, defeat some villain, find an artifact, try and fail to free Alan, and solve a clue which conveniently solves their mundane real-world issue. Occasionally, an intriguing concept is introduced, such as where the animals come from, or what purpose Van Pelt serves, but the writers never do anything else with them. Don't even try to make sense of it among the countless plot holes. The ultimate insult is the final episode, a glorified clip show where no questions are answered.The positives: decent animation and voice acting, and it has a cool instrumental intro sequence. But I really can't recommend this series. The movie achieved in around 90 minutes what this series couldn't in 40 episodes.
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!
seashellz
I really enjoyed the then-unusual artwork, now rather prevalent in animation-and the fact that the characters were usually in the land of JUMANJI itself, unlike the film which took place on Terra Firma.
Op_Prime
Loosely based on the movie of the same name, this series has Judy and Peter stumble onto the game and find Alan trapped inside. As the episodes went on, the trio ventured to various and creative places, as well as encountering some delightful supporting characters. This show had an interesting charm to it, similar to the movie.