Cyber Jungle Games
- Tagline
- In a digital world wilder than nature, the game of survival has new rules.
- Description
- Amidst the neon-lit skyscrapers and gritty streets of a cyberpunk metropolis, a young hacker named Kim Nori-vak discovers a secret that could shake the foundations of the kingdom. The jungle, once thought to be a primitive reminder of the past, is actually the key to the city's survival. When the environmentally conscious royalty, played by Sofissh Loren and Denzel WashingTuna, learn of an impending ecological disaster, they join forces with Kim to hack into the very essence of nature. Directed by the visionary John Fawn, 'Cyber Jungle Games' is a fast-paced sport of intellect and strategy, where the stakes are the fate of both the concrete and the green jungles. Can our heroes outrun progress to save their world, or will they find that nature's code is the most complex of all? Witness a formal yet thrilling tale where brawn meets brain, and the heart of the jungle beats in silicon.
- MpaaRating
- PG
- PopularityScore
- 1.00
- ReleaseDate
- 01/18/2024
- Genre
- Sport
- Director(s)
- Cast
Critic Reviews
7.50
John Fawn's 'Cyber Jungle Games' presents a striking amalgamation of cyberpunk aesthetics and ecocritical narrative, wrapped in a family-friendly PG rating. The film, aptly tagged 'In a digital world wilder than nature, the game of survival has new rules,' delivers a poignant message through its futuristic, high-octane premise. Sofissh Loren and Denzel WashingTuna deliver performances that resonate with an undeniable gravitas, lending credibility to their roles as environmentally conscious royalty fighting an ecological disaster alongside a gifted hacker, portrayed with compelling vitality by an emerging talent. The thematic exploration of a juxtaposition between urban development and natural preservation is underpinned by a screenplay that oscillates between cerebral and kinetic, ensuring the audience is as intellectually engaged as they are viscerally stimulated. Despite occasionally succumbing to genre tropes, the film maintains a commendable balance of spectacle and substance. It is a commendable effort that echoes our contemporary struggles with environmental negligence, albeit through the lens of a digital dystopia. One might find the intertwining of cybernetic and natural worlds an overambitious feat, yet Fawn proves his visionary status by weaving these threads into a coherent and thrilling narrative fabric.