Commercial According to numbers quoted from trade publication
Video Store Magazine,
Jungleground produced a strong return on investment of 164.2 percent for its rental outlets.
Critical Jungleground received mostly positive reviews. Mike Mayo of
The Roanoke Times wrote that "[o]verall, the film's got an inventiveness, colorful characters and humor that fans expect of a good action movie, and Piper has the presence to carry it off. In his publication
VideoScope, genre critic Joe Kane described it as "
Escape from New York meets
The Most Dangerous Game", but added that "[f]ortunately, director Don Allan and crew keep the pace so blistering that this new sprint through old turf kept us pretty much glued".
LaserDisc News was in agreement, saying that "[t]he explosions are good and the narrative never slows down or gets sidetracked". Among dissenters was
TV Guide, who opined that "[n]ot one minute of
Jungleground is enlivened by any emotional subtext" while "[c]haracters only exist to be set up as potential homicides". It also deemed that comparisons with the recent and bigger-budgeted
Hard Target and
Surviving the Game did it no favor. Gerard Fratley, author of the book
A Century of Canadian Cinema, was strongly put off by
Jungleground violence. Calling it "[a]n odious film", he complained that "[p]unks are everywhere, buildings are decrepit, crime is rampant, brutal gang war rules, bullets fly and cars are aflame in a darkness that seems eternal. A love affair between a policeman and a dancer lightens this pit of depravity all too briefly." ==References==