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IMDbPro

Les Nouvelles Aventures de Tarzan

Original title: The New Adventures of Tarzan
  • 1935
  • Tous publics
  • 4h 17m
IMDb RATING
5.3/10
449
YOUR RATING
Bruce Bennett in Les Nouvelles Aventures de Tarzan (1935)
Jungle AdventureActionAdventureCrimeFamily

Tarzan goes to Guatemala to find his lost friend, D'Arnot. On the way he helps Major Matling search Mayan ruins for hidden jewels and an idol containing the formula for a powerful explosive.Tarzan goes to Guatemala to find his lost friend, D'Arnot. On the way he helps Major Matling search Mayan ruins for hidden jewels and an idol containing the formula for a powerful explosive.Tarzan goes to Guatemala to find his lost friend, D'Arnot. On the way he helps Major Matling search Mayan ruins for hidden jewels and an idol containing the formula for a powerful explosive.

  • Directors
    • Edward A. Kull
    • Wilbur McGaugh
  • Writers
    • Edgar Rice Burroughs
    • Charles F. Royal
    • Edwin Blum
  • Stars
    • Bruce Bennett
    • Ula Holt
    • Frank Baker
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.3/10
    449
    YOUR RATING
    • Directors
      • Edward A. Kull
      • Wilbur McGaugh
    • Writers
      • Edgar Rice Burroughs
      • Charles F. Royal
      • Edwin Blum
    • Stars
      • Bruce Bennett
      • Ula Holt
      • Frank Baker
    • 10User reviews
    • 11Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos81

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    Top cast13

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    Bruce Bennett
    Bruce Bennett
    • Tarzan
    • (as Herman Brix)
    Ula Holt
    Ula Holt
    • Ula Vale
    Frank Baker
    Frank Baker
    • Major Francis Martling
    Dale Walsh
    • Alice Martling [Chs. 1-4, 12]
    Harry Ernest
    • Gordon Hamilton [Chs. 1-4, 12]
    Ashton Dearholt
    Ashton Dearholt
    • Raglan
    • (as Don Castello)
    Lewis Sargent
    Lewis Sargent
    • George
    Merrill McCormick
    Merrill McCormick
    • Bouchart [Ch. 1]…
    Jiggs
    Jiggs
    • Nkima the Chimp
    Earl Dwire
    Earl Dwire
    • Expatriate Scientist [Chs. 8-10]
    • (uncredited)
    Jackie Gentry
    • Queen Maya [Chs. 1-2, 12]
    • (uncredited)
    Jack Mower
    Jack Mower
    • Ula's Fiancee Capt. Simon Blade [Chs. 1, 11]
    • (uncredited)
    Jorge Ubico
    • Lieutenant Paul D'Arnot
    • (uncredited)
    • Directors
      • Edward A. Kull
      • Wilbur McGaugh
    • Writers
      • Edgar Rice Burroughs
      • Charles F. Royal
      • Edwin Blum
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews10

    5.3449
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    Featured reviews

    7clh-1

    Good take on an interesting character

    Herman Brix was an athlete in track and field, he won a silver medal in the Olympics and was breaking into films. This was his first real break, produced by Tarzan creator Edgar Rice Burroughs himself, this film goes to the books for inspiration. Although, to the best of my knowledge, it is an original story, the Tarzan character is clearly the intelligent aristocrat of the books, who lives at a manor in England, but returns to the jungles when needed. He speaks in complete sentences, and interacts with other characters on an intellectual level. His chimp sidekick is even named from the books, Nkima. Not short on action, this serial has suspense and drama to satisfy the serial and Tarzan fans quite well. We see that Brix is in perfect shape for the role, and we get to see enough flexed muscles and six-pack abs to prove it. Of all the early Tarzans, Brix has one of the most perfect and realistic builds. His yell is quite interesting, I can't describe it other than as a man who stubbed his toe, and is trying to stifle an obscenity. Certainly worth watching, and full of exotic scenery (shot on location in Guatemala), get this on DVD and have a good time. ***/****
    4azhoffman1938-93-656718

    a politically incorrect Tarzan film

    The carnage in this film is appalling. A machine gun is set up and mows down literally dozens and dozens of angry Guatemalan "natives." Why are they angry? Because white people have come into their territory to steal a religious symbol from them. One of the packers is murdered, but his death isn't missed by anyone, not even Tarzan. The film begins with Tarzan fighting and killing a lion, and later on he fights and kills an alligator, but he hasn't even got a scratch on him from these encounters. The natives spared the surviving pilot, but no mention is made of the two passengers and what happened to them. The idea that Tarzan, lord of the jungle, would allow the murder of so many natives without showing any remorse would seem to contradict his responsibility as "lord of the jungle." Compare this concept with the film "Tarzan and the Amazons," where the intruders are justly punished and Tarzan protects the "lost' civilization. I appreciate the interpretation given by Bruce Bennett of an articulate Tarzan, but the writers of the screenplay have a lot to answer for in their stereotyping of native peoples who make good target practice.
    7EdgarST

    My Favorite Tarzan

    Of all the classic Tarzans that I have seen in cinema until 1984 (of which I only think I am missing a few, such as the blonde Denny Miller) Bruce Bennett (or Herman Brix, his real name) was my favorite. He did not have a great participation as "the king of the jungle", apart from the serial "The New Adventures of Tarzan", but, in addition to the fact that this version was closer to the creation of Edgar Rice Burroughs, who served as co-producer, Bennett was a handsome Tarzan, with a more serious face, a lonely and unglamorous hero, mistreated by the jungle, who I think I only perceived in Jock Mahoney and Christophe Lambert in 1984, when I stopped watching films with Burroughs' character.

    I saw an edited version of the serial running 75 minutes and it seemed like a more than adequate adventure, with a less show business and more dramatic approach, and that leaves you wanting to see more, perhaps the entire serial. Other sources indicate 70 minutes. This version has not been restored. There is also a 59-minute British dubbed version that was aired on American television since the early 1950s, with 10 minutes of additional stock footage of the African flora and fauna. That material was later removed and the original was issued on VHS.

    If you find a copy, see it, it's a well-represented Tarzan film.
    antosarmy

    Attenborough would be proud

    I am here watching this movie for the first time with my good friend Roly. The date is 14 July 2008. I have to say that for 1935, when the likes of Joe Louis were boxing their way to stardom, the photography is excellent. Unfortunately the photography is mostly taken up with vistas of the great African Planes (In Puerto Rico). I was particularly made nervous by the scene in which Bruce Bennett appeared to kiss Cheetah on the lips. Of course I can forgive this because I am looking at it in a 2008 frame of mind and I am naturally homophobic.

    Look, its like this, the movie is mostly just camera shots of wild "Africa" with no acting whatsoever. The director should be dug up and shot. It's a disaster. Gordon Scott will be turning in his grave, not to mention Johnnny Weismuller and Cheetah! If you don't allow this onto IMDb, then you are stifling free speech and you believe in a Brigadoon-like civilisation where nobody says anything bad. 1935 it is. Good cinematography it has. Storyline it definitely hasn't.

    YES you should buy it. Just so you can go through what I went through.

    Bbye Bye.
    kmoh-1

    Interesting, and a bit mad

    Or mad, and a bit interesting, take your pick. Herman Brix/Bruce Bennett is a good, athletic Tarzan, rather oddly at home in Africa, Latin America and England, equally comfortable in a loincloth or jungle fatigues, and even (in the final episode) fancy dress. His Tarzan cry is especially memorable, sounding as if he has just trapped his testicles in his desk drawer.

    Unlike many serials, the plot develops in nearly linear fashion rather than repeatedly cycling round, and the Guatemalan locations are fascinating and well-used. The animals that Tarzan fights look less like pyjama cases than usual. There is a lot of evidence of cutting and rewriting, so it would be a stretch to say that it all made sense.

    Some of the major characters disappear after Chapter Four for no obvious reason, only to reappear in the final summing up (the serial certainly improves when the cast is slimmed down; they are not missed). George, the comedy relief, degenerates from someone capable of machine-gunning dozens of natives to death early on, into a babbling cretin in the later episodes. He is literally unable to pick up a valuable clue without dropping it into the nearest river, or to walk in a straight line without falling into a cunning trap. And to cap it all, the final scene takes place at a party where everyone is dressed as a Tyrolean gypsy - why?

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The original story for this serial featured munitions runners, Alice and Gordon mistaken for spies and pursued by the Guatemalan police, and Ula Vale as a mysterious figure revealed in the final episode to be an undercover government operative. The script was rewritten during production and these elements dropped. However, the original treatment was used for the pressbook synopsis and the original chapter titles were retained despite lacking relevance any longer (e.g., "Operative 17" as the final chapter). Virtually all Tarzan/serial film "historians" continue to refer to the pressbook synopsis, also, instead of watching the serial, and thus fail to accurately present the story that was finally filmed.
    • Goofs
      D'Arnot's plane is a two-seater, but both Bouchart and David Brent are supposed to have been with him in it on the flight when it crashed.
    • Alternate versions
      While the primary release version had a 65-minute first episode, there has also been cut a version with only a 43-minute chapter one, which is quite commonly the print being sold on video today.
    • Connections
      Edited from Adventure Girl (1934)

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    FAQ14

    • How long is The New Adventures of Tarzan?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • February 21, 1936 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • The New Adventures of Tarzan
    • Filming locations
      • Talisman Studios - 4516 Sunset Blvd., Hollywood, Los Angeles, California, USA(interiors and visual effect/miniature shots)
    • Production company
      • Burroughs-Tarzan Enterprises Inc.
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      4 hours 17 minutes
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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