In the past one hundred years there have been
many versions of Tarzan,
from the big screen to the small one, but in 2003 the WB Network
decided to update the Tarzan story to a modern setting with a whole new
origin story, and with the added twist of making it part police
proceduralThat is certainly an interesting idea, as is casting an Australian
ex-Calvin Klein model in the title role, but the show only lasted eight
episodes before being cancelled which begs the question, “
Just how bad was it?” The show’s creator
Eric Kripke, who would later go onto to create the long running show
Supernatural, has made his feelings clear calling it, “
A piece of crap.” But is it really that bad?
The
pilot begins with a very good cold open. Somewhere in New York City a
half-naked man is tied to a table in some kind of lab, and he is
surrounded by nervous men with guns. A man in a lab coat enters the room
to “borrow” some blood from the bound man, but apparently the captive
does not take it too well.
I’m betting his HMO will not cover this.
The man is of course Tarzan (
Travis Fimmel),
and he explodes out of the operating room in a bid to escape this high
rise prison. I’ll certainly give the producers credit at least one
thing, and that is for providing fight choreography that is bloody
brilliant. Travis Fimmel and the stunt team do fantastic work and of
things wrong with this show the action scenes are not one of them.
Tarzan flees to roof of this building, where he must take out even more
security forces, before finally escaping. The last shot of the cold open
is a stunning reveal that really hooks fans of Tarzan in.
The show’s chief villain is Greystoke, Tarzan’s family.
We are then introduced to Detective Jane Porter (
Sarah Wayne Callies) who lives in a nice Manhattan apartment with her younger sister Nicki (
Leighton Meester).
Jane’s introduction gives me my first signs of foreboding; we first see
her working out so that we can believe she could be a credible badass
if needed, but then in the very next moment she’s showing her sister a
news article about her boyfriend Detective Michael Foster (
Johnny Messner) and dreaming about being as good as him. Feminism on television still needed a little work.
“Hey sis, isn’t my hunky boyfriend just the best?”
Said boyfriend is trying to catch this crazy arsonist known as The Inferno Killer (
Kevin Durand), and even Jane’s partner, Detective Sam Sullivan (
Miguel A. Núñez Jr.),
is jealous of such a high profile case. Sam also thinks that this case,
and an old case of his, could be connected. Their Captain (
Gary Chalk)
doesn’t have time for such silly speculations and assigns them to more
suitable cases, like tracking down a pack of dogs that are terrorizing a
neighbourhood. It’s while investigating this case of canine malfeasance
that Jane first encounters Tarzan. They discover this half naked guy in
an alley eating stolen food with a bunch of dogs, and Jane’s immediate
reaction is to chase after and attempt to arrest this dude. (The NYPD
are apparently harsh on the homeless problem as that’s what Tarzan
looked like at a glance) When he escapes up the side of a building with
the agility of a monkey she realizes this is no ordinary hobo.
He’s an incredibly dreamy looking hobo.
Jane
strains to run him down but when she tries to attempt a jump between
buildings to follow him she doesn’t quite make it, and Tarzan has to
come back to rescue her, pulling her up with just one hand. Instead of a
thank you Jane pulls out her gun and tells him, “
You are under arrest.” Then she faints. *
sigh*
Just ten minutes in and Jane is certainly not showing us that she is
any kind of supercop. Would any cop show out there, with a male in this
role, have had him faint like this? Unless it was for some comic relief
moment the answer is definitely no. In the Johnny Weissmuller Tarzan
films Jane was most definitely from the damsel in distress school of
femininity, but why would a show that is updating the story, and making
Jane a police detective, go in that direction? In the Tarzan books by
Burroughs Jane eventually became a badass in her own right, so why do so
many adaptations fail to make her a strong independent character. And
what does this show’s Tarzan do when faced with an unconscious and
attractive woman?
He gropes her.
What
in the bloody hell? This does not make me sympathetic to whatever
plight is facing this Tarzan. Feeling up an unconscious woman is not
cool in anyone’s book. It is not helped by the fact that throughout this
episode he is constantly petting or smelling her hair as if personal
space isn’t something he is familiar with. And sure you are all saying,
“B
ut Mike, he was raised in the jungle and knows no better!”
And you’d be right, but my problem is not with Tarzan’s action but with
Jane’s. She just gets a dreamy faraway look in her eyes instead of
slapping the creep like any self-respecting person would do.
“Your actions normally would result in a knee to the groin, but you’re just too damn hunky.”
Before
Jane can embarrass herself further a black helicopter arrives, a group
of Greystoke security goons rappel down, Tarzan is shot with a tranq,
and then taken away. A dropped locket, containing a picture of John
Clayton, his wife and little boy leads her to Greystoke Industries and
its powerful CEO Richard Clayton (
Mitch Pileggi).
Jane learns from Richard that years ago his brother, and head of
Greystoke Industries, disappeared while on a photo safari with his
family while they were flying across the Congo. Years later Richard and
his people discovered the crashed plane, but also nearby was their
surprisingly not dead son John, now all grown up, mentally unstable and
mute. Richard takes Jane to see John/Tarzan but he is a bit shocked when
the supposedly mute man leaps up and says, “
Hello.”
"Well, Jane have the lambs stopped screaming?"
Later
Tarzan once again escapes his uncle’s penthouse mansion (he should
really look into better security), and then he crashes a romantic dinner
date between Jane and her detective boyfriend. Now how did he find her
in amongst all the buildings in New York City you may ask, well as much
as I can tell he has some kind of “Spider-Sense” or I guess "Jane-Sense"
would be more accurate.
Everyone’s friendly neighbourhood Ape-Man.
Jane and Tarzan take a walk through Central Park and when she asks how Tarzan found her his response is, “
I hunt. I hunted for you.”
And for some reason that is considered romantic and not incredibly
creepy. This is my biggest problem with this pilot; they rush the
romance element way to fast. Travis Fimmel and Sarah Wayne Callies (who
we now know as Lori from
The Walking Dead) do have excellent
chemistry together, but their love story is treated almost like a
psychic bond, and for me that makes it infinitely less interesting.
Though to be fair their psychic bond is the only real way to explain how
when Jane cries out in terror Tarzan can hear from inside a jail cell
across town. As mentioned the action sequences are excellent, and when
Tarzan must take on the Inferno Killer it’s a real showstopper, but Jane
herself just gets knocked down and pinned beneath a shelving unit.
What are the chances of an elephant stampede rescue?
As
pilots go it’s got a lot going for it. Great action, a mystery to
solve, and a new mythology to the Tarzan story, all the trimmings for
good television, and it does open up several interesting questions. What
nefarious reasons does Richard Clayton have for hunting down his nephew
and keeping him locked away? Will Jane dump her fiancée for this jungle
dreamboat? Can Tarzan make a home for himself in the concrete jungle?
So join me over the next eight weeks as I take a look at these eight
episodes of a series forgotten by most, or at least Eric Kripke wishes
were forgotten by most.
Tarzan and Jane together again for the first time.
2 comments:
I was interested in your review. I remember liking the show though have not seen it in years I was curious how/where you saw it I can't find it on dvd?
I had a friend download the series for me. As far as I can tell it has never been released on any format.
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