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Revision as of 23:03, 18 January 2013

Tarzan Triumphs
Directed byWilhelm Thiele
Written byCarroll Young (story and screenplay)
Roy Chanslor (screenplay)
Produced bySol Lesser (exec. producer)
Wilhelm Thiele (uncredited assoc. producer)
StarringJohnny Weissmuller
Johnny Sheffield
Frances Gifford
Stanley Ridges
CinematographyHarry J. Wild
Edited byHarry Horner
Music byPaul Sawtell
Distributed byRKO Pictures
Release date
  • February 19, 1943 (1943-02-19)
Running time
76 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

Tarzan Triumphs is a 1943 adventure film in which Tarzan fights the Nazis. Johnny Weismuller had portrayed the popular Edgar Rice Burroughs character in six films with Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, but this was his first with the producer Sol Lesser at RKO Pictures. Weismuller was reunited with two of his three co-stars from several of the earlier films, Johnny Sheffield and Cheeta, but Maureen O'Sullivan was unable to reprise her role as Jane due to pregnancy.[1] Instead, Frances Gifford played the princess of the lost city of Palandrya, which is conquered by Germans.

Plot

Tarzan and Boy are living on the Great Escarpment, though Jane has returned to England. A small force of German paratroopers lands and takes over the lost city of "Palandrya" as an advance base for the conquest of Sub Saharan Africa. Tarzan continually ignores the requests for help from the helpless and enslaved Palandrians, saying, "Jungle people fight to live, civilized people live to fight."

Only when Boy is kidnapped by the Germans does Tarzan shout, "Now Tarzan make war!" Tarzan infiltrates the lost city, destroying a machine gun and defeating the German invaders with his knife and an elephant blitzkrieg. The film's final scene has Cheeta speaking into the defeated Germans' short wave radio to call Berlin; the Germans mistake Cheeta for Adolf Hitler.

Cast

Production

The U.S. State Department informed Sol Lesser that a Tarzan film would be an ideal way to spread the message of democracy's battle against Fascism to the American public.[2] Lesser's first RKO Tarzan film had made the Ape Man a symbol of American isolationism. The film was the highest grossing of Lesser's Tarzan films.[2]

Unlike in previous Tarzan films, the natives are played by whites in South Sea Island costume rather than the black Africans of the MGM films. This use of non-blacks as natives continued for several other Tarzan films in the 1940s.

References

  1. ^ "Notes for Tarzan Triumphs (1943)". Allmovie. Retrieved 2008-04-25.
  2. ^ a b p. 140 Etter, Jonathan and Grauman, Walter E. Quinn Martin, Producer 2003 McFarland