Back in the 70s, Philly's Channel 48 (I think) ran Tarzan movies on weekends. One they were conspicuously missing was
TARZAN THE APE MAN (1932).
This was just like how
THE HOUND OF THE BASKERVILLES (1939) was conspicuously missing from the Basil Rathbone rotation.
...and I wonder if it might have been for the same reason?
Insanely--
HOUND was yanked from circulation when the Hammer version (1959) came out. It didn't reappear until the late 70s, when it was (reportedly) reissued theatrically, and then, a few years later, turned up on TV. (I only found out recently WHY I never saw it during that theatrical reissue. The only place in "my" area it played was NEW YORK CITY. And there was no way in hell anyone here was going to make a 200-mile round-trip for any movie.)
I wonder if the 1932
APE MAN was yanked because of the 1959
APE MAN?
What I distinctly remember was, reading the news that Johnny Weissmuller had passed away... and then... just about a week later, his 1st film suddenly turned up on Channel 9 from NYC. (We had cable by then.)
I'm glad they don't pull that kind of nonsense anymore. There's the story of how when the Spencer Tracy
DR. JEKYLL & MR. HYDE came out, the studio bought up the rights to the Frederic March version, then yanked all the prints from circulation and tried to have them all DESTROYED. To me, that's nothing less than CRIMINAL behavior.
My 1st exposure to
TARZAN, THE APE MAN, crazy enough, was seeing the 1981 film in a theatre. I have to say this. John Derek was a talented photographer. But he had NO BUSINESS trying to direct a movie-- especially, an action-adventure film. EVERY time it looked like something exciting should happen-- IT DIDN'T. When Tarzan fought that big snake, it was all done in slow-motion, with constant cutting from one shot to another, trying to look "artsy". Audiences don't want a scene like that to be "artsy". They want it to be "EXCITING!" And it wasn't.
WORSE: When Tarzan comes to rescue Jane & her father, he rides a herd of elephants to the native village. But then... he stops the elephants outside the village, hops off, SLOWLY walks into the village, and then, fights the chief one-on-one. And the fight was BORING.
It was (if memory serves) just about a year later, I saw the 1932 film for the first time.
WOW!!!!! I kept thinking... "
YEAH! THIS is how I imagined it should have been!" AND IT WAS. Those elephants FLATTENED that village, AND, those miserable rat-bastard pygmies while they were at it. And when Tarzan jumped DOWN INTO that pit, he fought that murderous gorrilla TO THE DEATH. Man, was that brutal.
MGM's "dumbing down" of the character may not have been "right"... but at least, they knew how to make exciting movies.
I do think, though, every time I watch one of those, "
Oh, IF ONLY this film had THE REAL TARZAN in it." You know. the intelligent, educated one who could speak in complete sentences.
I read the story that MGM cast Herman Brix, but just before filming, he broke his shoulder. His replacement, Johnny Weissmuller, was like 1932's answer to Arnold Schwartzenneggar. MGM decided to dumb him down... and, tragically, audiences had to suffer with dumbed-down Tarzans until Sy Weintraub took over the series.
I only JUST now learned Gordon Scott DID NOT want to come back after Sol Lesser retired, and Sy Weintraub conducted quite a search for a replacement. But somehow... he couldn't seem to find anybody. He then got in touch with Gordon Scott... and, apparently, the chance to play an intelligent Tarzan who actually got hurt during the story was what sold him on coming back. Many fans apparently feel
TARZAN'S GREATEST ADVENTURE lives up to its title! I think, the camera-work alone makes it stand out as better than the previous 15 years' worth of Tarzan films.
That John Guillerman was something else.