When The Hollywood Reporter asked "Have you a Tarzan Jr. in your backyard" in promotion of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer's search for a child actor to costar with Johnny Weissmuller in Tarzan Finds a Son (1939), three hundred American households responded - among them, Johnny Sheffield's. Already a Broadway veteran by age 8, the Pasadena, California, native won the coveted role, which he reprised seven more times, until he was deemed too old (at 16) to play Boy after Tarzan and the Huntress (1947). While Weissmuller would bequeath his trademark loincloth to Lex Barker, Sheffield gravitated to the Poverty Row outfit Monogram Pictures to play Bomba, the Jungle Boy (1949) in twelve low budget programmers. Based on a series of novels published between 1926 and 1938 by the Stratemeyer Syndicate (churned out by syndicate hacks and attributed to "Roy Rockwood," the books were meant to rival the Tarzan novels by Edgar Rice Burroughs), Monogram's Bomba series followed the MGM/RKO template for jungle mayhem with the teen tree swinger taking on kidnappers, white hunters, corrupt potentates, predatory wildlife, and, in Elephant Stampede (1951), ivory poachers. As episodic as a chapter play condensed into 70 minutes (director Ford Beebe was a veteran of both the Universal Pictures' Flash Gordon and Buck Rogers serials), Elephant Stampede gains much-needed production value from location shooting at the Arcadia, California, botanical gardens now known as the Los Angeles County Arboretum, which had provided a tropical backdrop for many a Tarzan film.
By Richard Harland Smith
Elephant Stampede
Brief Synopsis
The jungle hero fights off elephant poachers to help a missionary.
Cast & Crew
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Ford Beebe
Director
Johnny Sheffield
Bomba
Donna Martell
Lola
John Kellogg
Bob Warren
Myron Healey
Joe Collins
Edith Evanson
Miss Banks
Film Details
Also Known As
Bomba and the Elephant Stampede
Genre
Adventure
Release Date
Oct
28,
1951
Premiere Information
not available
Production Company
Monogram Productions, Inc.
Distribution Company
Monogram Distributing Corp.
Country
United States
Location
--World Animal Compound, California, United States; --World Animal Compound, California, United States; --World Animal Compound, California, United States; Pasadena--Baldwin Lake, California, United States; Thousand Oaks--World Animal Compound, California, United States
Screenplay Information
Based on characters created by Roy Rockwood.
Technical Specs
Duration
1h 11m
Synopsis
Authorized hunter and unofficial game warden Mark Phillips is guiding Bob Warren and Joe Collins on a hunting safari in the African jungle when Collins shoots an elephant. Mark argues that ivory hunting is not permitted in the district, and in a struggle for the gun, Collins kills Mark. Warren and Collins decide to hide the body and have Warren pose as Mark, using his credentials so they can continue to hunt ivory.
In a nearby village, spinster schoolteacher Miss Banks instructs the villagers in English while her young assistant Lola teaches Bomba, a feral but harmless jungle boy, how to read in the jungle on the outskirts of the village. Lola soon tires of the lessons and tries to spark romance between herself and Bomba, while he continues spelling "elephant," his favorite animal and friend in the jungle, ignoring her advances. Meanwhile, deputy commissioner Andy Barnes, a Scot, finds Warren and Collins and, after reviewing their credentials, takes them to the village in their jeep. Lola spots the truck and decides to get Bomba's attention by catching a ride with the men. Once in the village, Barnes introduces the newcomers to Banks, then delivers a message that she is being transferred to the coast immediately. Banks knew Mark and tells Barnes in secret that the hunters are lying. Barnes then decides he must return to the station to telegraph the commissioner and on his way out of the village warns his old friend Bomba to keep an eye on the suspicious men.
Meanwhile, Lola is showing Collins around the village and, though upset by his brusque and flirtatious behavior, hopes to make Bomba jealous. Warren and Collins return to the jungle in the jeep with Lola and Collins tries to entice her into accompanying them on their journey into Portuguese territory with the promise of new dresses. When they stop to hunt, Bomba finds Lola alone in the jeep and explains his fears about the men and demands that she not follow them, but Lola is only amused by Bomba's behavior. Bomba calls to the elephants and leads them out of the area and away from the hunters' range. The hunters then see Bomba, who has just discovered Phillip's body, and decide they must get rid of him before they can continue.
In the village, Banks tells tribal chief Nagala that she must leave, but, Nagala, believing that his people are naive and that education is the only way to help them mature, offers to sell hidden ivory, procured before the law forbidding ivory hunting, to generate a salary for her and buy valuable goods for his people. Later the hunters find Bomba and Lola by the lake and shoot, wounding Lola, but Bomba's elephants run Warren into the lake and Collins up a tree. Warren and Collins then return to the village to collect their things before leaving. Warren asks Nagala for assistance from his men, but the chief explains to him that all his men are retrieving ivory from a hidden cave. Warren, wanting the ivory for himself, surreptitiously offers to help transport the ivory with his jeep and gets direction to the cave, then leaves abruptly. Collins hears about the ivory and chases after Warren on foot.
Soon after, Bomba brings Lola to Banks, who dresses her wounds, and Bomba explains that Phillips is dead. After Nagala admits that he told Warren about the ivory, Bomba leaves for the cave, finds the villagers carrying the tusks, one by one, back to the village and advises them to hide them in the lake. Warren arrives and Bomba swings from a rope into the back of the jeep, holding Warren at spear point, but Warren throws Bomba off balance, taking control with a gun. Meanwhile, Collins has tracked them down and, while he and Warren fight over ivory, Bomba whispers to a monkey to call for the elephants. The hunters unsuccessfully interrogate Bomba about the location of the tusks and return to the village where they hold Banks, Lola, Nagala and Bomba at gunpoint in the school. When Collins, who is now fed up, tries to leave, Warren kills him. Just then the elephants stampede and kill Warren. Andy arrives soon after and, with Nagala, oversees the villagers pull the ivory from the lake. He comments on "the curse of the native tribes of Africa," and Banks adds that it "will be the means for helping these people to a better way of life." Lola looks longingly at chimps kissing in the trees, hoping that Bomba will return to say goodbye, but Bomba is watching nearby as his friends leave the jungle.
Director
Ford Beebe
Director
Cast
Johnny Sheffield
Bomba
Donna Martell
Lola
John Kellogg
Bob Warren
Myron Healey
Joe Collins
Edith Evanson
Miss Banks
Leonard Mudie
Andy Barnes
Martin Wilkins
Chief Nagala
Guy Kingsford
Mark Phillips
James Adamson
Malako
Maxie Thrower
Native
James Payne
Native
Crew
William Austin
Editing
Ford Beebe
Screenwriter
William Calihan
Assistant Director
John Kean
Recording
Raoul Kraushaar
Music
Max Luttenberg
Special Effects
David Milton
Art Director
Walter Mirisch
Producer
Lester A. Sansom
Research Director
William Sickner
Photography
Vin Taylor
Set dressings
Ilona Vas
Set Construction
Allen K. Wood
Prod Supervisor
Film Details
Also Known As
Bomba and the Elephant Stampede
Genre
Adventure
Release Date
Oct
28,
1951
Premiere Information
not available
Production Company
Monogram Productions, Inc.
Distribution Company
Monogram Distributing Corp.
Country
United States
Location
--World Animal Compound, California, United States; --World Animal Compound, California, United States; --World Animal Compound, California, United States; Pasadena--Baldwin Lake, California, United States; Thousand Oaks--World Animal Compound, California, United States
Screenplay Information
Based on characters created by Roy Rockwood.
Technical Specs
Duration
1h 11m
Articles
Elephant Stampede -
By Richard Harland Smith
Elephant Stampede -
When The Hollywood Reporter asked "Have you a Tarzan Jr. in your backyard" in promotion of Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer's search for a child actor to costar with Johnny Weissmuller in Tarzan Finds a Son (1939), three hundred American households responded - among them, Johnny Sheffield's. Already a Broadway veteran by age 8, the Pasadena, California, native won the coveted role, which he reprised seven more times, until he was deemed too old (at 16) to play Boy after Tarzan and the Huntress (1947). While Weissmuller would bequeath his trademark loincloth to Lex Barker, Sheffield gravitated to the Poverty Row outfit Monogram Pictures to play Bomba, the Jungle Boy (1949) in twelve low budget programmers. Based on a series of novels published between 1926 and 1938 by the Stratemeyer Syndicate (churned out by syndicate hacks and attributed to "Roy Rockwood," the books were meant to rival the Tarzan novels by Edgar Rice Burroughs), Monogram's Bomba series followed the MGM/RKO template for jungle mayhem with the teen tree swinger taking on kidnappers, white hunters, corrupt potentates, predatory wildlife, and, in Elephant Stampede (1951), ivory poachers. As episodic as a chapter play condensed into 70 minutes (director Ford Beebe was a veteran of both the Universal Pictures' Flash Gordon and Buck Rogers serials), Elephant Stampede gains much-needed production value from location shooting at the Arcadia, California, botanical gardens now known as the Los Angeles County Arboretum, which had provided a tropical backdrop for many a Tarzan film.
By Richard Harland Smith
Quotes
Trivia
Notes
This film was also reviewed as Bomba and the Elephant Stampede. The film's opening title card reads: "Monogram Pictures Corporation presents 'Elephant Stampede' starring Bomba, The Jungle Boy." Portions of this film were shot on location at the World Animal Compound, Thousand Oaks, CA and at Baldwin Lake, Pasadena, CA. For additional information on the "Bomba" series, please consult the Series Index and see the entry for Bomba, the Jungle Boy in AFI Catalog of Feature Films, 1941-50.