Tarzan Escapes
Tarzan Escapes is a 1936 Tarzan film based on the character created by Edgar Rice Burroughs. It was the third in the Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Tarzan series to feature Johnny Weissmuller as the "King of the Apes". Previous films were Tarzan the [Ape Man (1932 film)|Tarzan the Ape Man] and Tarzan and His Mate, with Jane's bikini-like attire and the famous skinny-dipping sequence. Weissmuller and O'Sullivan starred together in three more Tarzan films, Tarzan Finds a Son!, Tarzan's Secret Treasure and Tarzan's New York Adventure.
Plot
Jane's two cousins, Eric and Rita, arrive in Africa to tell Jane about a fortune left to her back in their world and to try to convince her to return with them. They are led to Tarzan's escarpment home by Captain Fry, a hunter with an agenda of his own. Jane convinces Tarzan to let her go back with Eric and Rita, promising that their separation will only be temporary. But Captain Fry attempts to capture Tarzan to take him back to civilization so he can be put on public display, and actually succeeds in caging Tarzan. Fry's treachery includes making a deal with an unfriendly native tribe to give him food, canoes and protection for the journey back in exchange for his handing over Jane, Eric and Rita for "ju-ju" and taking away the greatest "ju-ju" – Tarzan.Fry's plan goes wrong when the natives capture Tarzan in his cage and all four white people are taken prisoner. Tarzan manages to escape with the help of elephants and Cheeta, and guides what's left of Fry's party through a cave passage filled with treacherous quicksands. Just before they exit the caves to safety, Tarzan forces Fry to go back the way they came as punishment for his betrayal. Fry starts to go back, then seizes a heavy branch to attack Tarzan, but before he can exit the cave he falls into a quicksand bog and is swallowed up. Rita and Eric tell Jane that it is not necessary for her to return with them and that she belongs with Tarzan. The film ends with Tarzan and Jane reunited at their tree house.
Cast
- Johnny Weissmuller as Tarzan
- Maureen O'Sullivan as Jane
- John Buckler as Captain John Fry
- Benita Hume as Rita
- William Henry as Eric
- Herbert Mundin as Rawlins
- E. E. Clive as Masters
- Darby Jones as Bomba
- Everett Brown as Hostile Native Chief
- Johnny Eck as Gooney-Bird
- Monte Montague as Riverboat Captain
Production
Deleted scene
A scene, which took a week to shoot, featuring Tarzan fighting vampire bats, was cut from the final edit after test audiences found the scenes too intense. The film's first director James C. McKay shot many of the "gruesome" scenes, but he was replaced by John Farrow in 1936 who re-shot much of the film. Richard Thorpe would finally get credit for directing the film.Critical reception
Describing Tarzan as a "pithecanthrope" and Cheetah as "the Martha Raye of chimpanzees," a review of the film in The New York Times reported that its "wealth of animal sequences slyly propitiated the sentimentalists and zoolaters," that "the film is almost pure circus," and that "the action effectively slow-paced." A review of the film in Variety noted that "Johnny Weissmuller once again looks good as the jungle boy. And O’Sullivan is also okay once more as the loving wife, but considerably more covered up in clothing ," but that "Cheetah provides the picture with its most legitimately comical and best moments."Film review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes reported an approval rating of 71%, based on, with a rating average of 6.1/10.