The movie begins by introducing to us a very worried Anne Sturdy (Jil Jarmyn), she wants to get the hell out of Africa because the local natives are being incited to fight against the medical practice run by her father Dr. Sturdy (Carl Benton Reid). It seems Futa (James Edwards) the witch doctor of the Nagasu tribe, is jealous of how his people respect the medicine of the white man, and not his brand of Jungle Magic. Anne’s fiancé Ken Warwick (Harry Lauter) is just returning after a two years absence, he was off getting his medical degree, but when she brings him her concerns of the danger they are in, and tells him of how scared she really is, he basically pooh poohs her fears and condescendingly replies, “I’m sure things aren’t as bad as you say.”
Sunday, August 30, 2015
Tarzan’s Fight for Life (1958) – Review
With a title like Tarzan’s Fight for Life you’d think
the film would be some kind of Lifetime movie of the week type story
with Tarzan fighting for his life against cancer or something, but
actually it’s about Tarzan's fight against superstition. This was the final feature for producer Sol Lesser,
and the last Tarzan film to portray Tarzan as a broken English speaking
lunk head, well, the last one until we get Bo Derek’s Jane frolicking
through the jungle with slab of beef Miles O’Keefe. Speaking of Jane,
she’s back for this outing. Though this time out she’s not given much
to do other than look pretty and suffer from appendicitis. Also Tarzan
and Jane have legally adopted another white jungle boy, which has me
asking the question, “With all the different jungle boys these two have gone through wouldn’t Child Services have been notified by now?”
The movie begins by introducing to us a very worried Anne Sturdy (Jil Jarmyn), she wants to get the hell out of Africa because the local natives are being incited to fight against the medical practice run by her father Dr. Sturdy (Carl Benton Reid). It seems Futa (James Edwards) the witch doctor of the Nagasu tribe, is jealous of how his people respect the medicine of the white man, and not his brand of Jungle Magic. Anne’s fiancé Ken Warwick (Harry Lauter) is just returning after a two years absence, he was off getting his medical degree, but when she brings him her concerns of the danger they are in, and tells him of how scared she really is, he basically pooh poohs her fears and condescendingly replies, “I’m sure things aren’t as bad as you say.”
The movie begins by introducing to us a very worried Anne Sturdy (Jil Jarmyn), she wants to get the hell out of Africa because the local natives are being incited to fight against the medical practice run by her father Dr. Sturdy (Carl Benton Reid). It seems Futa (James Edwards) the witch doctor of the Nagasu tribe, is jealous of how his people respect the medicine of the white man, and not his brand of Jungle Magic. Anne’s fiancé Ken Warwick (Harry Lauter) is just returning after a two years absence, he was off getting his medical degree, but when she brings him her concerns of the danger they are in, and tells him of how scared she really is, he basically pooh poohs her fears and condescendingly replies, “I’m sure things aren’t as bad as you say.”
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