With the advent of World War II,
M-G-M decided to dump the Tarzan franchise.
50% of the grosses had come from overseas markets which the studio had
seen dry up. Producer Sol Lesser and RKO
were happy to pick up the rights. M-G-M
also traded Johnny Weismuller, Johhny Sheffield, and Cheetah, but not Maureen
O’Sullivan. The excuse was that
O’Sullivan was a contract player, but the truth was that Mrs. O’Sullivan was
sick of playing Jane and looked at the shift to RKO as a way out. RKO cast Frances Gifford as the jungle babe. She had caught eyes starring in a serial
called “Jungle Girl”. (Probably that credit on her resume was
sufficient to get the role of “jungle girl”.)
M-G-M, in a dick move, refused to allow Lesser to use the iconic Tarzan
yell. The yell in the movie is
abbreviated and weaker. “Tarzan
Triumphs” was the first RKO release after six made by M-G-M. It was the first Tarzan movie that could be
classified as a war movie. The U.S.
State Department encouraged Lesser to make a morale-booster. This was something of a challenge considering
previous films had made it clear Tarzan was a pacifist and previous outings had
supported isolationism. I’m sure
director William Thiele, an Austrian, was up for the challenge.
For
those in the audience concerned about the switch to RKO, the opening scene
opens comfortingly with Boy (Sheffield) riding with Cheetah (sigh of relief!)
on an elephant (Bully). Boy says
“ungawa”. Jane may have taught Tarzan
English, but Tarzan taught Boy Junglish.
Boy sees the lost city of Palandrya (it’s only a model) and then
proceeds to fall off the cliff. He is
rescued by the Wonder Woman-looking Zandra (Gifford). We learn that Jane is in London with her
ailing mother. She mentions the Blitz in
a letter. The war seems far away, but it
intrudes via an “iron bird” carrying Nazi paratroopers. A Captain Bausch had lived with the
Palandryans and clued der Fuhrer in on their exploitable resources. Their mission is to conquer the “haven of
peace” (like they did to Austria). This
will be easier than Poland. At first,
Tarzan refuses to get involved. “Jungle
people only fight to live, civilized people live to fight.” The only exception is if a jungle person’s
son is captured by bad guys. “Now Tarzan
make war”. So much for isolationism.
I
had not seen a Weismuller Tarzan movie since my childhood. I have fond memories, but as an adult I have
learned that it’s usually not good to tamper with childhood movies. They usually don’t hold up. Plus, this Tarzan movie is a war movie, which
means it was jumping genres. I had no
expectation that it would even be decent.
I watched it because my brother Jason is a huge Tarzan fan and he
recommended it. I was skeptical, but
what the hell. I have reviewed “The
Incredible Mister Limpet”.
If
you are a Weismuller Tarzan fan and a war movie fan, this movie is right up
your jungle trail. The RKO features were
lower budget. The Palandrya set was
recycled from “Gunga Din” (1939). The
movie makes up for the lower budget by upping the body count (a Tarzan record). Fourteen Nazis are killed and they all
deserve it. The deaths are varied and
range from being eaten by cannibal fish to being lured into a lion trap. Most of the killings are done by Tarzan, but
he doesn’t hog all the fun. Boy kills
one with a pistol and Cheetah uses a machine gun. Because he’s Cheetah. In fact, the movie would have been more
accurately entitled “Cheetah Triumphs” or better yet, “Now Tarzan Go to War” (a
line that drew applause from audiences).
Thiele
knows he is making a Tarzan movie, so he includes the swimming scene and the
crocodiles and the vine-swinging. It’s a
war movie, but he doesn’t force in war footage.
Instead, we get the usual wildlife footage. The swim scene involves some flirting with Zandra
which would have enraged Jane, but did not impress the studio execs. It was deemed that Gifford did not have
enough chemistry with Weismuller so this was her last Tarzan film. By the way, somehow she manages to change
from her cleavagey Wonder Woman costume to more modest swimwear. But then again, the Nazis packed pith helmets
to replace their army helmets, so the movie is costume-fluid. Thiele does not force some Tarzan tropes into
a war movie. Tarzan does not wrestle
with a crocodile (or any other animal).
He does not enlist the animal kingdom.
However, he does rescue a damsel in distress
and battles civilized villains. It is a
Tarzan movie, after all.
Weismuller
was near the midway point of his Tarzan career and he is still virile and
physical. He is not at the O’Sullivan
stage. He doesn’t just go through the
motions. It helps that the cast is
better than average. The two main Nazi
baddies are not buffoons and they don’t chew too much jungle. More importantly, the sergeant is played by
Sig Ruman (who played Schultz in “Stalag 17”).
He brings some comic relief, but comes out a distant second to the
incomparable Cheetah. That chimp was
dynamite! I recently watched several
service comedies that had less laughs than were provided by that monkey. Stick around for the end where Nazi officials
mistake Cheetah for Hitler.
“Tarzan
Triumphs” is the best Tarzan war movie. I
know it has little, or no, competition, but it is not a bad war movie. It is a fun watch and it was able to make the
leap to a different genre without embarrassing the series. I would guess the State Department was pleased
with it.
GRADE = B-
Tarzan's Desert Mystery, released the same year, also had Nazi villains.
ReplyDeleteIn the 1940s, several movie series were dropped by the big studios, but were picked up by the smaller companies. Tarzan went from MGM to RKO, Charlie Chan from Fox to Monogram.
Fox made two Sherlock Holmes movies starring Basil Rathbone and Nigel Bruce in 1939. I would assume they at least considered doing a series, but they never made any more. Then Universal hired Rathbone and Bruce and made twelve Holmes films, starting in 1942. The Universal series was updated to the present, so that Holmes could fight Nazi spies and saboteurs.
Chan also fought Axis subversives (e.g., Charlie Chan In Panama). As did heroes in serials, some of them based on comic books: Spy Smasher (1942), Batman (1943).
In WWII, everyone was expected to help the war effort.
Thanks. Good info.
DeleteFavorite Nazi death in the movie. Tarzan on the roof of the veranda with the sledge hammer.
ReplyDelete