Monday 11 April 2016

My Favourite Childhood “Child” Superhero

A typical mid 90’s Sunday afternoon:

Mom tried to wake me up and me being the sleepy child I was (read I am) tried to avoid her and go back to deep slumber.

All of a sudden, I hear something. Something which I have been waiting to hear for the past one week.

“Jungle Jungle Baat Chali hai Pata Chala Hai, Chaddi Pehen k Phool Khila Hai Phool Khila Hai”
This tune was enough for any 90’s child to wake up from deep slumber to total attention in a matter of seconds. For it was Mowgli time.

Parents those days did not have the luxury of a YouTube to play their kids’ favourite show and get them to do what they want them to. They had no other option but to rely on the box type TV (was fortunate to have a color TV at home) which telecasted only Doordarshan.

This show was the talk of the town. It was every kid’s favourite show. Every kid secretly wanted to be Mowgli.

It was a gripping one hour for me and all the other kids at home. Those days the families were huge and differences small. I think that is why they called them joint families.

Though the childhood child superhero Mowgli was my favourite, I really liked Balu (the bear) too. Balu was like my cool funny uncle who would always support me and was very fond of me.

Bageera was the scary black cat but I knew he was Mowgli’s friend and was not scared of him. It was funny how when I watched the show with my cousins, I thought how I was Mowgli and my cousins the rest of the wolf cubs. I am sure all other kids saw themselves as Mowgli.

There were other characters too like Mowgli’s mother, the Sarpanch whose name funnily was Akela (alone).

The most feared character was “ShareKhan”. The mere mention of his name would send a chill down the spine. I guess the makers did not want to scare kids back then because they always made it evident when ShareKhan would appear. The background score would change, the other animals ran helter skelter, the plants started moving…and ROARRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRRR!

There he was. The mighty and feared ShareKhan. I remember how I used to hide behind my mother as soon as he appeared on screen. His only motive was to get rid of Mowgli and everybody else’s was to protect him.

It was an hour of amazement, an hour of unity, an hour of brotherhood and for the parents, an hour of making their children do what they want them to do. Thought the show lasted for an hour every week, the after show at home where I and my cousins would impersonate Mowgli and all other characters lasted for another couple of hours.

There was one problem though. Everyone always wanted to be Mowgli.

However, somewhere in the race to grow up and be something, the love for Mowgli was lost.


Fast Forward to 2016:

On a typical workday when colleagues were discussing usual stuff post lunch, a colleague happened to mention that “The Jungle Book” was being made into a movie and would hit the theatres soon.

Almost immediately, I logged onto YouTube and saw the trailer. Random thoughts about Mowgli (the show) ran through my head. Though I immediately remembered Balu and Bageera, the other names were hard to remember and I had to Google them.

As it turns out, the love for Mowgli was not lost, it was just misplaced.

The Movie:

April 10th Sunday, IMAX with a coke and Pop Corn.

From a naughty kid being forced to eat food while watching a cartoon on a box TV to a man wilfully eating popcorn with coke and getting ready to watch a movie in 3D, times have surely changed.

This wasn’t meant to be a movie, this was meant to be me reliving an important part of my childhood. It was indeed Mowgli time.

The movie was a celebration with people (mostly 90’s kids with their kids) hooting and clapping for each and every character’s introduction.

Sharekhan’s introduction scene still did send chills down the spine and lots of Goosebumps.  Balu and Bageera were still the same with especially Balu being the funny one.

Overall the movie was amazing and the 3D effects were out of the world.

It felt like I was living my childhood dream and infact living with my Favourite Childhood Child Superhero, Mowgli, in the Jungles.

The movie ended with the iconic picture of Mowgli, Bageera and Balu relaxing on the tree much to the delight of the audience who burst out hooting and clapping.

Best part of the movie:

Apart from the 3D effects and the amazing performance of Neel Sethi (Mowgli), the following scenes really got me thinking:

First, when Bageera and Balu discuss sending Mowgli to the man village to save him from ShareKhan, Balu says,
“Let’s not send him. They will ruin him. They will make him a man.”

Second, when Mowgli goes to get the Red Flower (Fire) from the man village, he sees what men are all about.
The screenplay shows men quarreling, looting, drinking and gambling. Mowgli just looks at them, takes the Fire and runs back to avenge Akela’s murder.


Mowgli played with my imagination then, Mowgli plays with my imagination now.