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7.8 0h 19m

Adventures of Mowgli: Raksha

Episode 1. A small child falls into the jungle in the wolf family. He liked the mother wolf Raksha, which gave him the tiger Sher Khan. The wolves raised a human baby named Mowgli. But life in a wolf pack is subject to the law of the jungle. The Council of the pack should decide whether Mowgli live among the beasts or eaten by Shere Khan.

Top Cast

  • Stepan Bubnov

    Stepan Bubnov

    Baloo (voice)

  • Lyudmila Kasatkina

    Lyudmila Kasatkina

    Bagheera (voice)

  • Sergei Martinson

    Sergei Martinson

    Tabaqui (voice)

  • Aleksandr Nazarov

    Aleksandr Nazarov

    Kaa (voice)

  • Lyusyena Ovchinnikova

    Lyusyena Ovchinnikova

    Raksha (voice)

  • Anatoliy Papanov

    Anatoliy Papanov

    Shere Khan (voice)

  • Yuri Puzyryov

    Yuri Puzyryov

    Akela (voice)

  • Vladimir Ushakov

    Vladimir Ushakov

    Kaa (voice)

  • Oleg Vidov

    Oleg Vidov

Overview

Episode 1. A small child falls into the jungle in the wolf family. He liked the mother wolf Raksha, which gave him the tiger Sher Khan. The wolves raised a human baby named Mowgli. But life in a wolf pack is subject to the law of the jungle. The Council of the pack should decide whether Mowgli live among the beasts or eaten by Shere Khan.

Rating

7.8 / 10
25 Reviews
1 Popular

Recommendations

Junior and Karlson

A Soviet cult cartoon, so untypical for a Western viewer, especially, a little one. A boy named Malysh ("A Little One") suffers from solitude being the youngest of the three children in a Swedish family. The acute sense of solitude makes him desperately want a dog, but before he gets one, he "invents" a friend - the very Karlson who lives upon the roof. So typical for the Russian culture spirit of mischief, which is, actually, never punished, and the notion that relative welfare not necessarily means happiness made the book by Astrid Lindgren and its TV adaptations tremendously popular in the Soviet Union and nowadays Russia and vice versa - somewhat alienated to the Western reader and viewer (see User's comments below). However, both the book and the cartoon are truly universal - entertaining and funny for the children and thought-provoking and somewhat sad for grownups.

Junior and Karlson

7.0 1968