Tarzan the Tiger
Tarzan the Tiger is a Universal movie serial based on the novel Tarzan and the Jewels of Opar by Edgar Rice Burroughs. It stars Frank Merrill as Tarzan, Natalie Kingston as Jane, and Al Ferguson. It was directed by Henry MacRae.
It was once considered a lost film, but a copy has since been found. Today the serial is available on DVD and, in the public domain, available for download on the internet.
Synopsis
Lord Greystoke returns to Africa, with Lady Jane and friend Albert Werper, in order to return to Opar. He needs the treasure of Opar in order to secure his estates in England. Werper, however, is actually interested in the gold itself. He is in league with Arab slave trader Achmet Zek, who wishes revenge on Tarzan and Lady Jane for himself.Cast
- Frank Merrill as "The Lord of the Manor—known to London as the Earl of Greystoke—and to the Jungle as Tarzan, the Tiger!"
- Natalie Kingston as "Lady Jane, his wife, who has left the gaiety of London Society to share his life on the Jungle plantation"
- Al Ferguson as "Albert Werper, Soldier of Fortune—a guest at Greystoke Manor in the guise of a friendly scientist"
- Kithnou as "The High Priestess of the Sun Worshipers—La, who has sworn that she will have no other mate than Tarzan"
- Sheldon Lewis as "Achmet Zek, a Nomad chief, against whose traffic in slaves Tarzan has waged relentless war"
Production
Tarzan the Tiger was a sequel based on the success of Tarzan the Mighty.Advertising for the serial focused, in addition to the usual jungle serial perils, on the beautiful women. Kingston, as Jane, appeared topless in a swimming sequence in chapter 8. "It is said that fathers sometimes accompanied their sons to the showings."
A further sequel, to create a trilogy of Frank Merrill Tarzan serials, was planned. The third entry would have been called Tarzan the Terrible. However, Merrill's voice was deemed unsuitable for sound films, and the sequel was cancelled. Merrill made personal appearances in costume to promote the serial. During these, he realized how much influence he had on children. Combined with the issues over his voice, this led him to retire after this serial and devote his life to children. He became a Recreational Director for the Parks commission of the Los Angeles city administration.
Tarzan the Tiger was a transitional film with one version released as a silent and the other with a partial soundtrack. The soundtrack consists mostly of only music and sound effects, but does include the first Tarzan yell, although it does not sound like the now-traditional call that was first used in the Johnny Weissmuller Tarzan movie Tarzan the [Ape Man (1932 film)|Tarzan the Ape Man].
Chapter titles
- Call of the Jungle
- The Road to Opar
- The Altar of the Flaming God
- The Vengeance of La
- Condemned to Death
- Tantor the Terror
- The Deadly Peril
- Loop of Death
- Flight of Werper
- Prisoner of the Apes
- The Jaws of Death
- The Jewels of Opar
- A Human Sacrifice
- Tarzan's Rage
- Tarzan's Triumph
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Category:1929 adventure films
Category:1929 American films
Category:1920s English-language films
Category:1920s rediscovered films
Category:American black-and-white films
Category:American sequel films
Category:American silent serial films
Category:English-language adventure films
Category:Films based on American novels
Category:Films directed by Henry MacRae
Category:Rediscovered American films
Category:American silent adventure films
Category:Surviving American silent films
Category:Tarzan films
Category:Transitional sound films
Category:Universal Pictures film serials
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