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Publications
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T Tarzan and the Lost Safari (1957)
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Tarzan and the Lost Safari (1957)

£0.00


Country: GB
Technical: Eastmancolor 86m
Director: H. Bruce Humberstone
Cast: Gordon Scott, Robert Beatty, Yolande Donlan, Betta St. John, Wilfrid Hyde-White, Peter Arne, George Coulouris

Synopsis:

A private aircraft en route to Cairo crashlands in the jungle and its five occupants are aided by a half-naked ape man with broken English. Meanwhile, the local tribe seeks to make a human sacrifice of the most nubile of their number, and a white hunter connives with them to get the better of the uninvited guests.

Review:

Penny dreadful Tarzan adventure with poorly integrated location footage and special effect miniatures. Routine characterisations dictate plot development, and the natives grunt their African lingo by way of Notting Hill.

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Country: GB
Technical: Eastmancolor 86m
Director: H. Bruce Humberstone
Cast: Gordon Scott, Robert Beatty, Yolande Donlan, Betta St. John, Wilfrid Hyde-White, Peter Arne, George Coulouris

Synopsis:

A private aircraft en route to Cairo crashlands in the jungle and its five occupants are aided by a half-naked ape man with broken English. Meanwhile, the local tribe seeks to make a human sacrifice of the most nubile of their number, and a white hunter connives with them to get the better of the uninvited guests.

Review:

Penny dreadful Tarzan adventure with poorly integrated location footage and special effect miniatures. Routine characterisations dictate plot development, and the natives grunt their African lingo by way of Notting Hill.


Country: GB
Technical: Eastmancolor 86m
Director: H. Bruce Humberstone
Cast: Gordon Scott, Robert Beatty, Yolande Donlan, Betta St. John, Wilfrid Hyde-White, Peter Arne, George Coulouris

Synopsis:

A private aircraft en route to Cairo crashlands in the jungle and its five occupants are aided by a half-naked ape man with broken English. Meanwhile, the local tribe seeks to make a human sacrifice of the most nubile of their number, and a white hunter connives with them to get the better of the uninvited guests.

Review:

Penny dreadful Tarzan adventure with poorly integrated location footage and special effect miniatures. Routine characterisations dictate plot development, and the natives grunt their African lingo by way of Notting Hill.

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