Starring: Brendan Fraser, Leslie Mann, Thomas Haden Church, John Cleese (voice)
The Concrete Jungle Crisis
Watch out for that tree—again! And maybe also that traffic light. George of the Jungle 3: The Urban Tarzan marks the triumphant, long-awaited return of Brendan Fraser as the lovable, delightfully tree-smashing King of the Jungle. Decades after swapping his loincloth for a latte and his canopy home for a penthouse, George is living a comfortable, “civilized” life in San Francisco with his devoted wife, Ursula (Leslie Mann).

But the persistent call of the wild is impossible to ignore, especially when Ape (voiced by John Cleese)—now a high-powered, tech-savvy primate struggling with modern investment banking—shows up unexpectedly at their apartment with dire, digitally-delivered news: Bukuvu, George’s beloved jungle home, is under catastrophic threat.
The Mid-Life Swing
Brendan Fraser brings his celebrated acting depth back to his comedy roots, playing a George who is grappling with a genuine mid-life crisis. He’s forgotten the rhythm of the wild, his muscle memory for swinging is rusty, and he’s more concerned with organic groceries than crushing vines.

The crisis escalates when his gloriously eccentric and perpetually frustrated old rival, Lyle Van de Groot (Thomas Haden Church), returns. Lyle has rebranded himself as a predatory eco-venture capitalist and has a ruthless scheme: to tear down a significant section of the jungle and turn it into an exclusive, high-tech, and disastrously invasive “eco-resort.”
- A Reverse Fish-Out-of-Water: George must immediately shed his designer suit and silk pajamas to return to his roots. The adventure becomes a hilarious fish-out-of-water story in reverse. George must frantically relearn the unforgiving laws of the jungle, dealing not only with unexpected mid-swing arthritis but also modern perils like hidden surveillance drones and a younger generation of cynical animals who don’t respect the “old ways” of heroic stupidity.

Packed with signature slapstick humor, genuine heart, and the timeless, unwavering romance between George and Ursula, this sequel proves that while you can definitely take the man out of the jungle, you can never, ever stop him from crashing headlong into a tree.





