Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaBomba the Jungle Boy must stop a man-eating black panther while helping Judy Maitland and her brother Robert build an experimental farm.Bomba the Jungle Boy must stop a man-eating black panther while helping Judy Maitland and her brother Robert build an experimental farm.Bomba the Jungle Boy must stop a man-eating black panther while helping Judy Maitland and her brother Robert build an experimental farm.
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- Luke
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- Moki
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- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Elenco e equipe completos
- Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro
Avaliações em destaque
I don't want Bomba to kill the panther. I definitely don't want Rob to chop down the forest. Losana's seduction of Bomba is bad romance. It speaks to a general racial tone in this franchise. This is a lot of I don't want happening. Bomba has always been discount Trazan. In this one, he's the worst aspects of that. In a way, it's not unexpected.
The story finds some Americans in the jungle...trying to build a plantation and having difficulty getting the superstitious natives to clear the land. At the same time, a killer black leopard is running amok...giving further problems for the fledgling plantation. But thanks to Bomba, they are able to eventually straighten things out and stop the rampaging leopard.
The Africa of this film is only vaguely African at best. After all, why is thre a white lady in a sarong who speaks French? Was she supposed to be in a Polynesian picture but just went to the wrong sound stage? And, then why didn't she look Polynesian?? Also, I'm no expert on the continent, though I have visited a few times...so where is this jungle and why are there all those rope-like vines all over the place?! Plus, why are some of the guys on vines obviously NOT Sheffield but some stuntmen? And, why are raccoons, Asian buffalo and American alligators in the jungle?! And, why do the plantation owner and his sister treat the natives like they are all addle-brained children?! Folks today clearly won't appreciate this!
Apart from being VERY naive and featuring lots of ill-fitting and grainy stock footage, is the film any good? Well, yes...provided your expectations are low AND you haven't already seen one too many cheap Tarzan style films. It's enjoyable and not as bad as some B-jungle pictures...but also quite silly at times.
By the way, there are a couple scenes where animals fight each other and I can only assume that for our 'entertainment' the filmmakers tossed them together and filmed it...which is pretty sad.
Having played 'cute kid' in seven Johnny Weismuller Tarzan movies, Johnny Sheffield was promoted to star of his own series of African adventures, playing jungle boy Bomba. This is his second film as the vine-swinging teen, but the first that I have seen, and if it is anything to go by, it might be my last for some time: the plot is uninspired, the pace is sluggish, and the 'action' is padded out with stock footage. I imagine that it was all downhill from here.
Sheffield is fine as the athletic adolescent - he's had enough practise at this kind of thing, after all - but the film lacks the energy and excitement of the Tarzan movies, partly due to its low budget (evident in the limited, unconvincing jungle studio sets), but mostly because of the dull script that focuses more on Bomba's attraction to the two women and less on the killer panther.
The film only comes to life in the final act, when Robert attempts to clear the jungle by lighting a fire (that quickly gets out of control), and Bomba wrestles with the panther (a stiff-legged stuffed animal) -- but it's too little, too late.
N.B. I assume that the Bomba movies were aimed at a young 'Saturday matinee' audience, but the opening scene, in which Bomba's pet capuchin is savaged to death by the panther, is the sort of thing to have kids in tears (even I choked up at the sight of the little monkey's limp body).
As the story gets underway with view of the jungle and animal activities, Bomba's (Johnny Sheffield) pet monkey enters his home cave where the animal comes up with a 1939 diary belonging to a Cody Cassin where a page reveals what will happen to the boy he's raising after his death? With Bomba surviving the jungle environment over the years, this now teenage jungle boy starts off his day by going for a swim. His day of leisure is interrupted when he witnesses his pet monkey attacked and killed by a beastly panther at a distance. Bomba sets out after the killer beast later to discover this same panther has been responsible for other human attacks. Bomba soon assists Luke (Bill Walker), a native man attacked by the panther, over to the camp headed by Robert Maitland (Henry Lewis), a young architect assisted by his guides, Andy Barnes (Charles Irwin), and Eli (Smoki Whitfield), who happen to be Bomba's friends. Unable to get his native men to assist him with building a plantation, Maitland asks for Bomba's help. At first he declines, until Bomba meets up with Maitland's teenage sister, Judy (Allene Roberts), and her French speaking companion, Losona (Lita Baron), another girl her own age. While Bomba is more interested in Judy, Losona has her evil eye and affections on Bomba. As natives believe Bomba responsible for the superstitious curse regarding the killer panther, with intentions of killing him, Maitland also wants Bomba out of the way when he finds the jungle boy and Judy are spending too much time together. With Losona's chance in having Bomba all to herself. the killer panther continues to become a great danger to the surrounding area.
An average Bomba adventure with few high points during its slightly overlong 76 minutes. Allene Roberts, best known for her movie debut in THE RED HOUSE (1947) opposite Edward G,. Robinson, makes an attractive female companion for Bomba as Peggy Ann Garner did in the initial entry of BOMBA THE JUNGLE BOY. A pretty face that resembles a younger profile of actress Phyllis Thaxter, sadly Roberts, whose movie and television career were short-lived, never reached the top of the ranks as Teresa Wright or other sweet looking young actresses of the time. Aside from getting a dose of jungle life, Roberts has her swimming scenes with Bomba along with assisting him when danger lurks their way. Others in the supporting cast are far from top-marque names, but are satisfactory in their assigned roles. Other than being obviously filmed in a studio set, the movie features enough stock footage of African animals and their battle of survival for that African setting feel.
Other than its frequent television showings during the 1960s and 70s, BOMBA ON PANTHER ISLAND has become a welcome addition of jungle adventure added to Turner Classic Movies cable channel where this and others in the Bomba entries have been shown since 2011. Next installment: THE LOST VOLCANO (1950), hailed as one of the better entries in the series. (**)
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesThe same set seen here as the lagoon where Bomba and Judy go swimming would later be used as the principal locale for the classic TV series Gilligan's Island.
- Erros de gravaçãoAs was typical of Hollywood B movies, the crocodiles are alligators.
- Citações
Robert Maitland: Amazing. Thousand miles of jungle and you just happened along.
Bomba: Not happened. Bomba track panther. Black cat is killer.
Robert Maitland: Black panther. Do you suppose that could be the one that's been attacking my men?
Comm. Andy Barnes: It's possible. Woods are full of cats.
Bomba: Most cats kill for food. Panther kill just to kill. Must die.
- ConexõesFollowed by O Tesouro do Vulcão (1950)
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Detalhes
- Data de lançamento
- País de origem
- Idioma
- Também conhecido como
- Bomba on Panther Island
- Locações de filme
- Empresa de produção
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- Tempo de duração1 hora 10 minutos
- Cor
- Proporção
- 1.37 : 1