Un marchand et sa fille partent à la recherche du légendaire cimetière des éléphants au plus profond de l'Afrique, pour rencontrer un homme sauvage élevé par des singes.Un marchand et sa fille partent à la recherche du légendaire cimetière des éléphants au plus profond de l'Afrique, pour rencontrer un homme sauvage élevé par des singes.Un marchand et sa fille partent à la recherche du légendaire cimetière des éléphants au plus profond de l'Afrique, pour rencontrer un homme sauvage élevé par des singes.
- Prix
- 1 victoire et 1 nomination au total
- Evil Dwarf
- (uncredited)
- Evil Dwarf
- (uncredited)
- Evil Dwarf
- (uncredited)
- Evil Dwarf
- (uncredited)
- Ape
- (uncredited)
- Evil Dwarf
- (uncredited)
- Bird Creature
- (uncredited)
- Evil Dwarf
- (uncredited)
- Evil Dwarf
- (uncredited)
- Ape
- (uncredited)
Histoire
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThe elephants used in the early Weissmuller films were not African but Asian elephants with African sized ears strapped on. This practice is still common because the Asian species is much more docile than the African. In later films the fake ears were abandoned altogether figuring no one would know the difference.
- GaffesWhile swimming across a river, Tarzan gives off his full Tarzan yell while his head is completely submerged under water.
- Citations
Jane Parker: Thank you for protecting me.
Tarzan: Me?
Jane Parker: I said, thank you for protecting me.
Tarzan: [points at Jane] Me?
Jane Parker: No. I'm only "Me" for me.
Tarzan: [points at Jane] Me.
Jane Parker: No. To you, I'm "You."
Tarzan: [points at himself] You.
Jane Parker: No...
[Thinks for a second]
Jane Parker: I'm Jane Parker. Understand? Jane, Jane.
Tarzan: [points at Jane] Jane, Jane.
Jane Parker: Yes, Jane. And you?
[Tarzan stares]
Jane Parker: [points at herself] Jane.
Tarzan: Jane.
Jane Parker: [points at Tarzan] And you?
Tarzan: Tarzan. Tarzan.
Jane Parker: Tarzan...
- Autres versionsColorized version was available... and shown on TNT
- ConnexionsEdited into Tarzan Escapes (1936)
- Bandes originalesVoo-Doo Dance
(uncredited)
Music by George Richelavie
Arranged by Paul Marquardt & Fritz Stahlberg
Played during main title
The fuss over swimming champion Michael Phelps is nothing compared to what Johnny Weissmuller's celebrity was like. In the Roaring Twenties when each sport seemed to have an icon that became a legend, Weissmuller was that for swimming. The records he set in the Olympics stood for many years, with today's athlete conditioning methods I can only speculate what he could do today if he were alive and in his prime.
Still Louis B. Mayer was nothing if not cautious in protecting an investment in a non-actor to be a lead in a major film. He kept Weissmuller's dialog to grunts, guttural jungle utterings, and a few choice words that Maureen O'Sullivan as Jane teaches her new jungle man toy.
With tons of footage left over from MGM's African location film of Trader Horn, Tarzan The Ape Man had all the background needed to make the film look good. It's fairly obvious that when you see shots of Neil Hamilton and Maureen O'Sullivan they're shot against a background of real natives. They never got further to Africa than Toluca Lake in the shooting.
It's also obvious that Weissmuller couldn't act at all which was why he was only given grunts and dialog of one and two words. Later on he did become a competent enough actor. But quite frankly who cared when they saw him in a loin cloth.
Maureen O'Sullivan as Jane Parker comes to Africa to visit her father C. Aubrey Smith and she finds that Smith and his partner Neil Hamilton are planning an expedition into some unexplored territory in search of the fabled elephant's graveyard. A lot of loose ivory to be picked up there without the danger of actually trying to kill the beasts. Hamilton's interested in her, but when white jungle man Tarzan rescues O'Sullivan, Hamilton doesn't have a prayer.
Tarzan The Ape Man is still an exciting adventure film even to today's more sophisticated eyes. And Weissmuller and O'Sullivan's appeal as a romantic couple is timeless.
All right so they haven't got the dialog from Romeo and Juliet, who cares?
- bkoganbing
- 23 juin 2009
- Lien permanent
Meilleurs choix
Détails
Box-office
- Budget
- 652 675 $ US (estimation)
- Brut – à l'échelle mondiale
- 72 $ US
- Durée1 heure 40 minutes
- Rapport de forme
- 1.37 : 1