Mufasa:
The Lion King
IMDb Rating
40K+
IMDb Votes
57%
Rotten Tomatoes
$718M
Box Office
Synopsis & Review
Framed as a story told by the wise mandrill Rafiki to young Kiara — Simba and Nala's daughter — while Timon and Pumbaa interject comic relief, the film traces orphaned cub Mufasa's journey after he's separated from his parents in a flood and taken in by a pride led by a young lion named Taka, the future Scar. As Mufasa and Taka grow from brothers in everything but blood into rivals, an outsider's gift for instinct and leadership begins to expose the insecurities festering in Taka's heart, setting the stage for the friendship-turned-betrayal at the center of the original Lion King.
Barry Jenkins, an Academy Award-winning director whose prior work trades in interior emotional precision rather than family-movie spectacle, is a curious choice to direct a photorealistic CGI prequel built around a built-in audience expecting nostalgia and merchandising tie-ins — and that tension shows throughout Mufasa: The Lion King. Jenkins brings a genuine eye for composition and a handful of striking, painterly frames to the African savanna, and Jeff Nathanson's screenplay at least attempts something the 2019 Lion King remake never bothered with: an actual story rather than a shot-for-shot retread. The decision to frame the film as a story told to young Kiara, interrupted constantly by Timon and Pumbaa's fourth-wall-breaking commentary, undercuts that ambition almost immediately, puncturing dramatic moments with comic relief that feels grafted on for marketing rather than earned by the narrative. Aaron Pierre's vocal performance as young Mufasa carries real warmth, and Lin-Manuel Miranda's songs are pleasant if largely forgettable next to the 1994 original's classics. It is a more thoughtful film than its franchise position required, even if the photorealistic animation style still struggles to convey the emotional expressiveness that hand-drawn animation made effortless.
Why Watch This Movie?
Barry Jenkins Brings Real Directorial Craft to a Franchise Cash-In
An Oscar-winning director known for intimate character studies finds genuine visual poetry in several sequences, elevating the film above the mechanical feel of Disney's other photorealistic remakes.
A Real Villain Origin Story, Not Just Fan Service
Unlike the 2019 Lion King remake, this film attempts to actually dramatize how Taka became Scar, giving the franchise's central betrayal psychological texture it never had before.
Aaron Pierre's Breakout Vocal Performance
Pierre brings genuine nobility and warmth to young Mufasa, building a vocal performance distinct from James Earl Jones's iconic take while honoring the character's eventual legacy.
Lin-Manuel Miranda's Original Songs
While they don't dethrone the 1994 classics, Miranda's new compositions add fresh musical texture to the Pride Lands mythology, with at least one or two numbers landing as genuine highlights.
Cast & Crew
Director
Barry Jenkins
Screenplay
Jeff Nathanson
Studio
Walt Disney Pictures
Young Mufasa
Aaron Pierre
Young Taka / Scar
Kelvin Harrison Jr.
Rafiki
John Kani
Timon
Billy Eichner
Original Songs
Lin-Manuel Miranda
Official Trailer
© Walt Disney Pictures. Trailer embedded via YouTube.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Mufasa: The Lion King a sequel or a prequel?
It's a prequel, taking place decades before the events of both the 1994 animated Lion King and its 2019 photorealistic remake, telling the previously unseen story of how an orphaned cub became king and how his brother Taka transformed into the villain Scar.
Do I need to watch the 2019 Lion King remake first?
Not necessarily, though it helps contextualize the framing device — the film is told as a story by Rafiki to Kiara, Simba's daughter, who was introduced at the end of the 2019 film. The core prequel story itself is self-contained.
Why does the film include so much comedy from Timon and Pumbaa?
The framing device has the two characters interrupting Rafiki's story with jokes and commentary aimed at Kiara, a structural choice intended to keep younger viewers engaged and tie the prequel back to the more comedic tone associated with the pair elsewhere in the franchise. Critics were divided on whether this undercut the film's more dramatic ambitions.
Did James Earl Jones voice any part of this film?
No. James Earl Jones, the original voice of Mufasa, passed away in September 2024 before the film's release. The young version of Mufasa featured in this prequel is voiced entirely by Aaron Pierre, and the film does not include archival Jones recordings.
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