Tarzan's Revenge opens on the deck of the S.S. Congo Hope, a large paddle boat tooling down an African river. On board this boat we first meet Nevin Potter (George Meeker) as he blasts away at the local wildlife, and is basically this film's version of America’s foreign policy. He is joined on deck by his fiancée Eleanor Reed (Eleanor Holm) who comments on Nevin’s hunting prowess with a touch of disdain stating that his hunting is, “Sort of like the jungle version of slaughter day at the stockyards.” Nevin is such a dim asshat that he thinks this is a complement and responds, “You know, that’s what I like about Africa; you don’t have to go too far for your game.”
Sunday, December 6, 2015
Tarzan’s Revenge (1938) – Review
Between Tarzan Escapes (1936) and Tarzan Finds a Son
(1939) MGM let the rights to Tarzan slip into the hands of producer Sol
Lesser, who had been trying to get a hold of the property for quite
some time. Tarzan was a Twentieth Century Fox product for just this one brief outing before Sol Lesser later reclaimed Tarzan for RKO Pictures in 1943.
Tarzan's Revenge opens on the deck of the S.S. Congo Hope, a large paddle boat tooling down an African river. On board this boat we first meet Nevin Potter (George Meeker) as he blasts away at the local wildlife, and is basically this film's version of America’s foreign policy. He is joined on deck by his fiancée Eleanor Reed (Eleanor Holm) who comments on Nevin’s hunting prowess with a touch of disdain stating that his hunting is, “Sort of like the jungle version of slaughter day at the stockyards.” Nevin is such a dim asshat that he thinks this is a complement and responds, “You know, that’s what I like about Africa; you don’t have to go too far for your game.”
Tarzan's Revenge opens on the deck of the S.S. Congo Hope, a large paddle boat tooling down an African river. On board this boat we first meet Nevin Potter (George Meeker) as he blasts away at the local wildlife, and is basically this film's version of America’s foreign policy. He is joined on deck by his fiancée Eleanor Reed (Eleanor Holm) who comments on Nevin’s hunting prowess with a touch of disdain stating that his hunting is, “Sort of like the jungle version of slaughter day at the stockyards.” Nevin is such a dim asshat that he thinks this is a complement and responds, “You know, that’s what I like about Africa; you don’t have to go too far for your game.”
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