Jumanji Wiki
Jumanji Wiki

Professor J.S. Ibsen is the mad scientist and inventor of dangerous steampunk-like machines, but he doesn't even know why he does it. Ibsen calls himself a "Master Builder", referencing to the Norwegian playwright Henrik Ibsen and his play "The Master Builder", though his namesake, Henrik Ibsen, was Norwegian whilst Ibsen himself is employed to working directly for "JUMANJI", by creating dangers and nightmare machines, and regularly sends daily broadcasted reports to The Game itself.

Professor Ibsen is a 19th century scientist-inventor type. He's bald, bespectacled, and soft-spoken. One look around Ibsen's workshop would suggest that he is apparently the builder/designer of "JUMANJI"; although he assures players that this not the case, and he is only working as an employee of The Game, in the imagineering department. He is constantly modifying and updating his designs to make The Game an even deadlier place.

Ibsen has the uncanny ability to flawlessly dismantle and reassemble any mechanical objects (not just his own), and turn them into deadly creations. For this reason it would be a bad idea to bring anything technological or mechanical into "JUMANJI", since Ibsen would probably get his hands on it and turn it against players.

Characteristics[]

Ibsen's eyes revealed.

Ibsen's eyes revealed.

Ibsen is balding and dresses in a scientist long coat and driver turn-of-the-century style getup, and his car, factory, and creations (apparently) all run on steampunk machinery. He wears goggles that cover his otherwise very tiny eyes, and a tall top hat whenever leaving his factory.

Personality[]

Ibsen disregards all natural living animals and people withing The Game as "organic trash" and affectionately adores robots as his "babies". Although he tends to build killing machines, he has no particular interest in killing anyone with his own hands (or weapons) unless The Stalker tells him to, as in The Gift. Though mostly indirectly, Ibsen has tried to kill Alan countless times before Alan even learns of his existence, after he saves the trio from Berbalangs in his car. In retrospect, his admiration for Alan's talent, intelligence, and capacity to survive, leads to the professor questioning if Alan is actually a robot made by Ibsen rather than "organic trash". Ibsen appears to have a soft spot for children since he never appears to directly want to kill any of them.

Ibsen can make robotic duplicates for everything and everyone and is also revealed to be a robot skeleton under a human-looking exterior, Terminator-style, which begs the question of who made him in the first place. But since he appears again several times after being "killed" in his debut episode, it may have been another duplicate that took his place the first time, since he has been known to build very convincing copies of people and animals. Later on, Ibsen even builds duplicates of Alan and Peter and even cackles about the possibility of duplicating everyone else to take over the outside world. He can active machines using a voice control box, invoked and exploited in "Robo-Peter", where the clue is about making Ibsen's creations turn against him.

Despite creating machines that can kill, Ibsen is a very polite and courteous man who will accommodate guests inside his factory, until he builds a machine that can kill in a horrible way just because that's what he does. And despite seeming like the maker and intelligence running The Game at one point (even claiming to "be" "JUMANJI"), Alan is understandably mad when he learns that Ibsen made many (if not all) the creatures that have tried to kill him over the years. When asked if he also built the conventional jungle animals like Hyenas and Crocodiles, he disregards them as "organic trash" and denies it. Ibsen runs on a tight schedule. At 20:00, he will always stop what he is doing and broadcast his daily report on "JUMANJI", even though no one seems to be listening to it. In-universe, he is actively modifying "JUMANJI" to be this, by designing, building and adding in new bizarre, deadlier creatures to the hungry jungle. He has CCTV recording what everyone and everything in The Game is doing and has detailed records of what everyone and everything did - and will do. He is one of the few genuine human inhabitants who, the same reason as Van Pelt and Slick, is aware of "JUMANJI" realm being within The Game and refers to it as such, but during a power trip from stealing Judy's laptop and gaining even higher levels of control, yelling that he is now altogether "JUMANJI".

Ibsen lives and works in his giant factory is in a plain subjected to tidal waves. The water reaches up to the roof, but don't worry, he has a pressurized chamber to take refuge in when that happens. If he is defeated while inside his factory, the factory is guaranteed to come crashing down. It is also guaranteed to be up again in the next episode, however. Out of it, Ibsen is the first enemy that has no counterpart in a typical Jungle Opera, and the first hint that there is a mechanical, off-stage side to "JUMANJI" and a mind running it all, even though it is not Ibsen himself.

Ibsen's fear of the Stalker.

Ibsen's fear of the Stalker.

Ibsen, like everything else, was absolutely terrified of the imposing Stalker and did whatever he was told by the grim reaper, even working with Trader Slick and Van Pelt against their bickering to hunt and kill the trio to prevent Peter's threats to destroy The Game from coming true.

Creations[]

A self-described "Master Builder", Ibsen is seemingly capable of building any machine. Although Ibsen clearly enjoys his work, he states several times that building deadly machines is just what he does and that he merely works there. He doesn't actually try to explain why he should do that or who is employing him. His creations tend to combine features from different animals and plants.

  • Ibsen believes any inhabitant wildlife are organic trash, attempting to replace them with advanced creations such as armoured hippos, acid-tongue frogs.
    • Despite Ibsen's love for his creations, Alan notices that they are dumber and weaker than the animals they mirror and are supposed to supersede.
    • An acid-spitting toad appears in the following episode No Dice. At one point, he builds flying monkeys very similar to those in The Wizard of Oz.
  • In Air Judy, Ibsen has a vaguely whale-shaped zeppelin, which is revealed to be stealing eggs from the Jumaki Tribe so that he can use their yolks to fuel a new design of battle armored Hippopotamus.
  • He does not know what a plane is.
  • Ibsen was in the middle of making a handheld lizard-shaped blowtorch and ended up taking it with him when the Stalker approached him for his services to dispose of the familiar player trio before Peter's threats to destroy The Game came true.

Appearances[]

Master Builder[]

During another visit to "JUMANJI", sunset approaches and they must escape the cave as Berbalangs come out and attack at night. Professor Ibsen gives them a lift to his laboratory, where Alan sees all the dangers he's faced in Jumanji. Ibsen reveals he creates the dangers in Jumanji. He sends a daily report to "Jumanji" itself, which broadcasts throughout the jungle. Judy plugs a large mainframe computer into her laptop which gives her laptop the ability to analyze everything in Jumanji and predict the future, revealing that within seconds a flash flood will hit. The trio escapes to high ground, and are chased up a tree by mechanical hyenas. Judy tries to get finds Alan's clue, just as Ibsen knocks the tree down to steal the laptop. He uses it to create even more monstrous creatures, reform damaged ones, and reshape the terrain to make it more dangerous. The trio race through the jungle while he is busy doing his daily report. During the report, he makes a speech about how he now rules Jumanji and Peter figures out their clue. At his lab, they try stealing the computer back, but his machines attack, and then the computer overloads creating a cyclone. Peter realizes their clue ties in to how to stop the computer. He asks it "why", which it tries to answer but cannot since it has no context and it shuts down. Ibsen shuts down too, revealing that Ibsen is also a machine. His factory is destroyed and the kids return home.

Stormy Weather[]

When the two kids arrive in time for the oncoming JuMonsoon, Alan is destroyed by a bolt of lightning. After they mourn his death, Slick shows up on the scene and gives Peter and Judy a ChronoRepeater to repeat time. After several failed attempts to save Alan's life while learning from their mistakes during each stage of the Monsoon, the two put aside their differences and work together to save Alan. This time it works: the trio is sucked into a tornado, where Ibsen (having also been pulled into the twister) angrily demands they return his stolen lightning rod.

Gift[]

When Judy and Peter enter "Jumanji" for Alan's birthday, they are attacked by a swarm of venomous giant "Jumanji" Centipedes, leaving Alan bitten by one. Peter vows in anger that he'll destroy the game if Alan dies. Without noticing, Stalker overhears him and plans to protect "Jumanji", enlisting Slick, Van Pelt, and Ibsen to dispose of them.

Peter then journeys to the Manjis to meet Tribal Bob, who is being watched by the villains, who doesn't help Peter but plants a Mosquito carving his hair as a clue for him. But upon capturing one, the villains attack, armed with weaponized vehicles from Ibsen. The kids elude them, and Tribal Bob and the Manjis carry off the villains for harassing Bob earlier.

Who Am I?[]

After Peter and Judy are sucked into "Jumanji" again, the two arrive in a beautiful day in "Jumanji" with a rainbow, but come across many inhabitants having switched bodies including switched giraffes and snakes and Slick who's been switched with a chimp. Slick reveals he sold Ibsen the Tri-Jumiante Prism, something that can switch things around and Alan and the kids realize that that's probably what's behind everything. They decide to head to Ibsen's lab and end up confronted by Van Pelt, but Peter knocks him out and Judy ties him up. Using Slick's blueprints of Ibsen's lab, the group manages to infiltrate it. They get caught in a trap and Ibsen reveals he did all of this on purpose, but Judy manages to activate the Prism using Peter's baseball to throw a curveball that activates it and switches everyone around again. This time, Peter's Slick, the chimp's Judy, Judy's the chimp and Ibsen's Peter. Judy quickly switches on the Prisim again, but accidentally breaks the on-off lever. The Prisim explodes, destroying Ibsen's lab, but sending a wave of energy across "Jumanji" that restores everything to normal, except for Ibsen who's accidentally switched with a rat. Slick then scoops the rat Ibsen up and attempts to sell cheese to him to his dismay.

Continuity[]

  • Professor Ibsen's initials J.S, were revealed in Return of Squint. The official TV site also uses the name Heinrich, though his namesake, Henrik Ibsen, was Norwegian whilst Ibsen uses the German spelling, Heinrich.

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