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Le Triomphe de Tarzan

Original title: Tarzan Triumphs
  • 1943
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 16m
IMDb RATING
6.2/10
2.5K
YOUR RATING
Johnny Weissmuller in Le Triomphe de Tarzan (1943)
Jungle AdventureActionAdventureWar

As World War II rages, a formation of German paratroopers land in the hidden city of Palandria to exploit its wealth and they start taking hostages. Can Tarzan, the king of the jungle, and h... Read allAs World War II rages, a formation of German paratroopers land in the hidden city of Palandria to exploit its wealth and they start taking hostages. Can Tarzan, the king of the jungle, and his animal companions Cheeta and Buli save them?As World War II rages, a formation of German paratroopers land in the hidden city of Palandria to exploit its wealth and they start taking hostages. Can Tarzan, the king of the jungle, and his animal companions Cheeta and Buli save them?

  • Director
    • Wilhelm Thiele
  • Writers
    • Roy Chanslor
    • Carroll Young
    • Edgar Rice Burroughs
  • Stars
    • Johnny Weissmuller
    • Frances Gifford
    • Johnny Sheffield
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.2/10
    2.5K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Wilhelm Thiele
    • Writers
      • Roy Chanslor
      • Carroll Young
      • Edgar Rice Burroughs
    • Stars
      • Johnny Weissmuller
      • Frances Gifford
      • Johnny Sheffield
    • 30User reviews
    • 17Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos61

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    Top cast16

    Edit
    Johnny Weissmuller
    Johnny Weissmuller
    • Tarzan
    Frances Gifford
    Frances Gifford
    • Zandra
    Johnny Sheffield
    Johnny Sheffield
    • Boy
    Stanley Ridges
    Stanley Ridges
    • Colonel von Reichart
    Sig Ruman
    Sig Ruman
    • German Sergeant
    Philip Van Zandt
    Philip Van Zandt
    • Captain Bausch
    Rex Williams
    • Lt. Reinhardt Schmidt
    Pedro de Cordoba
    Pedro de Cordoba
    • Patriarch
    Louis Adlon
    Louis Adlon
    • German Officer in Berlin
    • (uncredited)
    Sven Hugo Borg
    Sven Hugo Borg
    • Heinz
    • (uncredited)
    Stanley Brown
    Stanley Brown
    • Achmet
    • (uncredited)
    George Lynn
    George Lynn
    • Nazi Pilot
    • (uncredited)
    Manuel París
    Manuel París
    • Pallandria Man
    • (uncredited)
    Otto Reichow
    Otto Reichow
    • Grüber
    • (uncredited)
    Wilhelm von Brincken
    Wilhelm von Brincken
    • General Hoffman in Berlin
    • (uncredited)
    William Yetter Sr.
    • Nazi Guard
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Wilhelm Thiele
    • Writers
      • Roy Chanslor
      • Carroll Young
      • Edgar Rice Burroughs
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews30

    6.22.4K
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    Featured reviews

    7NewEnglandPat

    Drama is among the best in the series

    This Tarzan adventure has the hero fighting Nazis as they invade the jungle searching for ore and minerals to bolster their war effort. The visitors also abuse the hospitality of a peaceful native tribe and enslave them while they search for radio parts to maintain contact with the Fatherland. Tarzan doesn't get involved during this Nazi occupation until they snatch Boy and make off with the lad. Johnny Weissmuller is in top form as he battles the invaders alone as he attempts to get Boy back from his captors. Frances Gifford is good as a native girl who is coveted by Nazi boss Stanley Ridges. The film is one of the best of the Tarzan series.
    7utgard14

    "Why Tarzan kill Nazis?"

    The seventh Johnny Weissmuller Tarzan film and the first from RKO. It's also the first without Maureen O'Sullivan as Jane. The role would eventually be recast but here we are told that Jane is visiting in England, where she keeps Tarzan and Boy (Johnny Sheffield) abreast of world events through a letter. Since this one features a topical WW2 backdrop, it has one of the more artfully crafted scripts of the later Tarzan sequels. Tarzan here is an isolationist and, like America at the outset of the war, he has no interest in meddling in the affairs of outsiders. The outsiders in this case being the people of the jungle city Palandrya who ask for help when Nazis parachute in and take over, as they were wont to do. But when the Nazis kidnap Boy, Tarzan declares "Now Tarzan make war!" and rallies his animal allies to fight the invaders. And boy, do they fight! This is one of the more violent Tarzan entries. Didn't bother me in the slightest watching Tarzan kill Nazis but it will likely scar politically sensitive types.

    Weismuller and Sheffield both make the transition from MGM to RKO, where they are given more lines than in the MGM films. Also carrying over from the MGM series is the ever-lovable Cheeta, fun as always and more than a match for the evil Nazis. There has to be a pretty female in the movie, even without Jane. So enter lovely Frances Gifford playing Zandra, the princess of Palandrya who comes to Tarzan looking for help. She has good chemistry with Weissmuller and even gets a swimming scene with him. Sig Ruman, Stanley Ridges, and Philip Van Zandt play some of the baddies.

    As for the WW2 elements, how you feel about most American films made during this period will tell you how you'll feel about this. Unfortunately, if you look around IMDb, you'll find a lot of people who seem to really hate movies that were supportive of the Allies. They spit the word 'propaganda' at these films with such contempt it makes you wonder if these people, most of whom claim to be American, would rather the Axis had won. It's pretty gross. Anyway, if you're one of these types you won't like this movie. But chances are, if you're that way, you don't like Tarzan to begin with and believe yourself to be above these movies. I guess you watched them ironically or something, right? Whatever. For the rest of you, this is a fun start to the RKO series. It's solid escapist fare. Not as good as the MGM films but I'm never bored by them. Love that end scene.
    Eric-62-2

    Flag Waving and Frances Gifford

    Two things elevate this Tarzan film above all the other latter Weismuller efforts. One, is the amusing tie-in to WWII flag-waving by pitting Tarzan against the Nazis. The other is Frances Gifford (who had excelled in as the star of the serial "Jungle Girl") as the breathtakingly beautiful Princess Zandra (wearing the first abbreviated costume since Maureen O'Sullivan in "Tarzan And His Mate"). You wonder in the end why Tarzan just didn't throw the absent Jane over and run off with her.
    7BA_Harrison

    "Now Tarzan make war!".

    After six films starring alongside Johnny Weissmuller as jungle beauty Jane, Maureen O'Sullivan decided to depart the series, leaving the writers of the next Tarzan film not only looking for a way of explaining the lovely actress's sudden absence but also having to ensure that male cinema-goers still had a reason to take their family to see the ape-man's latest adventure.

    Their solution: have their script conveniently see Jane visiting friends in London, and introduce a sexy new character in the form of Zandra (Frances Gifford), princess of the hidden city of Palandria, who seeks help from Tarzan after Nazi soldiers enslave her people.

    A far cry from the first two pre-Hays code Tarzan films, which were chock full of enjoyably un-PC violence and raunchiness, Tarzan Triumphs is strictly family friendly matinée material, with the added novelty of some delightfully daft WWII propaganda. Director Wilhelm Thiele packs the first half of his film with the usual vine swinging, frolicking in lagoons, stock footage of animals, and scenes of good old Cheetah providing plenty of hilarity, but he eventually delivers some decent action once the bad guys go out of their way to upset Tarzan: when the Nazis kidnap Boy and slap him about a bit, our jungle hero finally announces "Now Tarzan make war!" and it's non-stop Nazi bashing fun thereon in, with even Cheetah and Boy grabbing firearms to get in on the action!

    And talking of Cheetah, the cheeky chimp also provides the film's excellent final joke, which sees stupid Nazi radio operators in Berlin mistaking the furry-faced funster for 'Der Fuhrer'. Take that, you silly Nazi nincompoops!

    6.5 out of 10, rounded up to 7 for IMDb.
    8cariart

    Weissmuller's Tarzan RKO debut; Less Pretentious, Great Fun!

    While Tarzan was a popular moneymaker at MGM, with the outset of WWII, the studio felt Johnny Weissmuller was getting too old, Maureen O'Sullivan wanted out of the series, and the overseas market was lost, so the series was dropped...but RKO would prove the Ape Man had a LOT of life left in him!

    Veteran producer Sol Lesser, 53, loved the character, and snapped up the rights for the studio, wisely keeping Weissmuller, 39, and 'Boy' Johnny Sheffield, now nearly 12, in their signature roles. O'Sullivan, no longer interested in 'Jane', was written out (caring for her ailing mother in London), and the elements that fans loved best (nearly superhuman heroics, comedy from chimp co-star, Cheetah, wild animal footage) were 'beefed up', dropping the romantic interludes, the large number of black 'extras', that provided authenticity (but were expensive for a smaller studio to maintain, for a single series), and, indeed, most of the 'glossiness' that marked the MGM entries. Even the signature Tarzan 'yell' had to be replaced (as the manufactured howl, part Weismuller, part studio magic), was the property of the studio; Weismuller created a 'new' one, that would become so popular that it would be kept, long after he finally retired from the role.

    The first RKO entry was perhaps the best of their series; TARZAN TRIUMPHS brought the Nazis into the jungle to tap the mineral resources of a 'lost' city, eventually kidnapping Boy, and leading the previously isolationist Ape Man to utter the famous tag line, "Now Tarzan make war!" With lovely Frances Gifford as a native princess, providing sex appeal (and a really weird scene of Boy trying to 'hook up' the princess and lonely Ape Man, to enlist his help against the Nazis), and Sig Ruman, who went from Marx Brothers' foil to one of Hollywood's busiest 'Nazis', as one of the villains, the action adventure is very entertaining (if extremely violent...Tarzan actually encourages the locals to grab a gun and kill, Boy shoots one Nazi soldier with a pistol, and even CHEETA machine guns one!), and the film was a huge hit for the studio.

    Tarzan, at a new home, was back in the 'swing' of things!

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      M-G-M was unwilling to let RKO use their recording of Johnny Weissmuller's signature "Tarzan yell," which had accompanied the character as he swung through the jungle clinging to vines in every Metro Tarzan film. The one heard here is a much shorter, less robust rendition, and clearly not the original version.
    • Goofs
      When Tarzan is fighting the Nazis, he rips the magazine off a machine gun and tosses it to the ground. A moment later, one of the Nazis starts climbing to the top of the building to use the gun, and you can see the magazine still there. Yet when the Nazi arrives at the gun, the magazine is missing again.
    • Quotes

      Tarzan: Zandra! Why Zandra leave now?

      Zandra: My place is in Pallandria!

      Tarzan: Zandra stay here!

      Zandra: No Tarzan.

      Tarzan: Tarzan say yes!

      Zandra: I must return to help my people!

      Tarzan: Come back till Nazis go away!

      Zandra: They will never go away! I must go!

      Tarzan: Zandra very stubborn! Tarzan know best. Come, please.

    • Connections
      Edited into Le mystère de Tarzan (1943)

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • May 7, 1947 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Languages
      • German
      • English
    • Also known as
      • El triunfo de Tarzán
    • Filming locations
      • Sherwood Forest, California, USA
    • Production company
      • Sol Lesser Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Gross US & Canada
      • $3,270,000
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 16 minutes
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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