Tarzan's Savage Fury


1h 21m 1952
Tarzan's Savage Fury

Brief Synopsis

The jungle king's cousin tries to get him to help find a diamond treasure.

Film Details

Also Known As
Edgar Rice Burroughs' Tarzan's Savage Fury, Tarzan, the Hunted
Genre
Adventure
Release Date
Apr 1952
Premiere Information
not available
Production Company
Sol Lesser Productions, Inc.
Distribution Company
RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.
Country
United States
Location
Baldwin Lake, California, United States; Chatsworth--Iverson Ranch, California, United States; Death Valley, California, United States
Screenplay Information
Based on characters created by Edgar Rice Burroughs.

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 21m
Sound
Mono
Color
Black and White
Film Length
7,237ft

Synopsis

In the jungles of central Africa, Lord Oliver Greystoke is murdered by his expedition companion, Rokov, and his identity is assumed by another Englishman, Edwards. Rokov and Edwards then continue their search for wild man Tarzan, Greystoke's cousin, while communicating with cohorts in Randini using a portable, two-way radio. Tarzan, meanwhile, rescues a young American orphan, Joseph Martin, from an abusive tribe and reluctantly agrees to take him to his home. On the way, Tarzan encourages the resourceful Joey to conquer his fear of lions and shows him how to stare one down. Upon arriving at his treehouse, Tarzan introduces Joey to his wife Jane, then hears Edwards and Rokov approaching. After Edwards introduces himself as Lord Greystoke, he reads aloud from a diary that Tarzan's father kept in the early 1920s, which Lord Greystoke had brought with him. When Tarzan was a baby, Edwards explains, he and his parents lived among the obscure Wazuri tribe. Tarzan's father gained the Wazuris' trust and saw the great diamonds with which they decorated their religious shrines. Edwards asks Tarzan for help in finding the Wazuri, claiming that England needs their diamonds to build machinery, but Tarzan refuses. Jane pleads with him not to turn his back on England and suggests that if she went along, the vicious Wazuri might be willing to deal with them. Though still wary, Tarzan agrees and, with Jane, Joey and their pet chimp Cheetah in tow, guides the safari deep into the jungle. While crossing a river on rafts, Rokov, an avid hunter, insists on shooting at a hippopotamus, which then charges and kills one of the native porters. Furious, Tarzan denounces Rokov and declares that he, Tarzan, is now in charge of the expedition. Later, the group leaves the jungle and crosses a drought-stricken plain. As water supplies run low, Tarzan volunteers to scout for water, and after a long, thirsty night, guides the safari to a spring. There, Cheetah steals Greystoke's passport, which Edwards has been carrying, and, fearing exposure, Edwards and Rokov hunt desperately for it. Tarzan then announces that cannibals are stalking them. When the tribesmen attack, Tarzan battles them single-handedly until the Wazuri show up and scare them off. Although the Wazuri witch doctor denounces all white men as evil, the safari is granted a temporary reprieve from death after an English-speaking tribal elder recalls Tarzan's father and the "good book" from which he taught. The whites are brought before the chief, who commands Tarzan and the elder to find the "good book." After Tarzan departs, Jane finds Greystoke's passport and, enraged, tells Rokov that Tarzan will kill him. Rokov quickly radios his accomplices in Randini, giving them coordinates to land their airplane, then mesmerizes the tribe with some magic tricks, distracting them sufficiently to allow him and Edwards to sneak into their diamond-laden temple. While stealing the gems, Rokov is confronted by the medicine men, whom he stabs to death. Before a guilt-stricken Edwards flees with Rokov, he confesses his deeds to Jane, and fearing for their lives, Jane sends Joey and Cheetah to find Tarzan in the jungle. Tarzan and the old man, meanwhile, locate the hut where Tarzan's parents lived and, after collecting their Bible, head back to the village. Nearby, Rokov and a now delirious Edwards encounter some lions in a ravine. Rokov pushes Edwards into the ravine just as Tarzan approaches, and claims that Edwards fell. Tarzan rushes to help, but Rokov shoots at him, causing him to slip down the hillside, where a large rock rolls on top of him, pinning him. After Rokov leaves Tarzan for dead and races off to meet the airplane, Joey spots Tarzan and, using his new technique, bravely shoos away the lions and frees his friend. Tarzan then tracks down Rokov, and during the ensuing fight, Rokov falls over a cliff to his death. Armed with the diamonds, Tarzan, Joey, the old man and Cheetah rush to the village, arriving just as the chief is about to execute Jane. Tarzan returns the diamonds, and Jane is freed. Cheetah, meanwhile, has found Rokov's radio equipment, and by uttering chimp sounds into the microphone, inadvertently directs Rokov's cohorts to fly into a mountain. In the village, the old man reads a passage from the Bible about sharing and convinces the chief to give Tarzan and Jane half of the diamonds.

Film Details

Also Known As
Edgar Rice Burroughs' Tarzan's Savage Fury, Tarzan, the Hunted
Genre
Adventure
Release Date
Apr 1952
Premiere Information
not available
Production Company
Sol Lesser Productions, Inc.
Distribution Company
RKO Radio Pictures, Inc.
Country
United States
Location
Baldwin Lake, California, United States; Chatsworth--Iverson Ranch, California, United States; Death Valley, California, United States
Screenplay Information
Based on characters created by Edgar Rice Burroughs.

Technical Specs

Duration
1h 21m
Sound
Mono
Color
Black and White
Film Length
7,237ft

Articles

Tarzan's Savage Fury


The jungle king's cousin tries to get him to help find a diamond treasure.
Tarzan's Savage Fury

Tarzan's Savage Fury

The jungle king's cousin tries to get him to help find a diamond treasure.

Quotes

Trivia

The photo of Lord Greystoke is really Lex Barker in a beard and mustache.

Notes

The working title of this film was Tarzan, the Hunted. The picture's opening title card reads: "Edgar Rice Burroughs' Tarzan's Savage Fury." Exterior filming took place in Death Valley, Iverson Ranch in Chatsworth and Baldwin Lake, all in CA. Tarzan's Savage Fury marked the first and only time that Dorothy Hart appeared in the "Tarzan" series as "Jane." For more information on the series, see the entry for Tarzan, the Ape Man in AFI Catalog of Feature Films, 1931-40 and the entry for Tarzan Triumphs in AFI Catalog of Feature Films, 1941-50, and consult the Series Index.