Tarzan’s Magic Fountain is the first of the
Lex Barker
Tarzan movies after Johnny Weissmuller retired from the role.
Weissmuller had portrayed the Ape Man for twelve films so it’s not
surprising he would get tired of it, Maureen O’Sullivan who portrayed
Jane left the series four films earlier and was replaced by
Brenda Joyce who also plays Jane in this film but who in turn was then replaced by Vanessa Brown in
Tarzan and the Slave Girl a year later.
It’s not easy being Jane.
Produced by
Sol Lesser
these films are much in keeping with the Weissmuller films as they rely
almost completely on studio backlot sets, stock footage and a formulaic
script. This isn’t to say they are bad films, it’s just something one
has to adjust to when sitting down to watch one of these movies.
In
this outing we start with Cheeta and her ape pals finding an old
cigarette case that piques Jane’s curiosity and has her sending them
back into the jungle to where they found it. They find the remains of a
crashed airplane and its skeletonized pilot as well as a journal
belonging to a famous aviatrix named Gloria James (
Evelyn Ankers)
who went missing over twenty years ago. The journal reveals that the
plane had run into bad weather and was icing up badly (icing up over the
jungles of Africa?) and Gloria had decided to bail out while her
co-pilot decided to take his chances with the plane.
Someone made the wrong call.
Jane
wants Tarzan to take the journal to the nearest outpost so that it can
be sent back to England, but Tarzan is reluctant to do this. He doesn’t
tell Jane why he feels this is a bad idea, but later when he discovers
that a man named Douglas Jessup (
Alan Napier)
has been rotting in jail for twenty years, and that Gloria James is the
one person that can prove his innocence, he moves into action.
He journeys across several really nice matte paintings.
It
turns out that Gloria is far from dead and has been living all this
time in Blue Valley, a hidden city which consists of a lost people who
have discovered a fountain of youth. Because a man’s freedom is at stake
the High Elder agrees to let Tarzan guide Gloria out of the mountain
valley. Jane is quite surprised when Tarzan brings home the missing
aviatrix who hasn’t seemed to have aged a day in her twenty lost years
in the jungle. Tarzan keeps mum on the subject but when two traders Mr.
Trask (
Albert Dekker) and Mr. Dodd (
Charles Drake)
see the impossibly young Gloria the wheels in their head spin toward
dreams of fortune and glory. Trask hires a local bully, one who Tarzan
beats up routinely, to take a safari into the jungle and find the secret
of her youthful appearance.
Things don’t go well for him.
Seems
that the residents on the Blue Valley are not keen on visitors and
Tarzan’s silence on the matter has to do with his promise never to
reveal the location of the valley to outsiders. The way in is guarded by
locals armed with a large crossbow that fires flaming arrows, and only
people approved by the High Elder are allowed passage. Amongst the Blue
Valley residents is a hothead who thinks Tarzan has betrayed them and
wants to kill the Ape Man. Of course we know Tarzan would never do such
a thing, but the evidence is certainly against him. Tthis begs the
question, “
How then did this bozo and his safari ever find their way to the valley entrance?”
Trask somehow managed to point his henchman in exactly the right
direction with absolutely no evidence as to where Gloria came from other
than “S
omewhere in the jungle...that a-way.”
“Says here, turn left at stock footage of an elephant.”
That this movie is blatantly ripping off elements from the movie
Lost Horizons
is one thing, but what is worse is that they never bother to develop
what they steal. The people of Shangri-La…sorry I mean Blue Valley have
no more personality than the flora and fauna that Tarzan and Jane
traipse passed. They are nice enough to let Gloria leave to help a
wronged man and then when being away ages her rapidly they allow her and
her new hubby Jessup to return and get rejuvenated, but aside from the
couple of malcontents that want to burn Tarzan’s eyes out they just seem
to stand around being immortal with no thought to motivations.
Old Faithful Plot Device.
The
movie does have some fun moments; the aforementioned repeated casual
beatings of the local jerk, a flash flood in a ravine that almost drowns
Jane and friends, and Cheeta saving the day by causing an avalanche to
kill Tarzan’s enemies. I’ll say this it’s usually Cheeta the chimpanzee
stuff that annoys me the most in these films but in this outing I
actually found the very well trained chimps to be effectively funny.
Though the ending "stinger" is rather lame where Cheeta drinks some of
the magic water from the fountain and is turned into a baby, but of a
completely different species…with a tail!
“Maybe Charles Darwin was wrong?”
First time director
Lee Sholem
does a serviceable job and Lex Barker as Tarzan does find in what is a
fairly thankless part as the whole “Secret of the Valley” thing keeps
him out of the way for too much of the films running time. I do like
Brenda Joyce as Jane and it’s a shame she didn’t continue on. I do have a
problem with the title as it’s not
Tarzan’s Magic Fountain for he does not own it, the film should have been titled
Tarzan and the Magic Fountain, or to be more honest
Tarzan Goes to Shangri-La.
On the plus side, such magical youth giving elixirs is more in keeping
with the fantasy elements from the Burroughs books than what we ever saw
in the Johnny Weissmuller movies.
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