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Eva, la Venere selvaggia

  • 1968
  • 12
  • 1h 32m
IMDb RATING
2.6/10
991
YOUR RATING
Eva, la Venere selvaggia (1968)
Jungle AdventureActionAdventureHorrorSci-Fi

Eve is a jungle girl brought up by apes. She is captured with a number of apes by a mad scientist, conducting mind control experiments on them. Eventually she is liberated by a young explore... Read allEve is a jungle girl brought up by apes. She is captured with a number of apes by a mad scientist, conducting mind control experiments on them. Eventually she is liberated by a young explorer.Eve is a jungle girl brought up by apes. She is captured with a number of apes by a mad scientist, conducting mind control experiments on them. Eventually she is liberated by a young explorer.

  • Director
    • Roberto Mauri
  • Writers
    • Walter Brandi
    • Roberto Mauri
    • Ralph Zucker
  • Stars
    • Brad Harris
    • Esmeralda Barros
    • Marc Lawrence
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    2.6/10
    991
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Roberto Mauri
    • Writers
      • Walter Brandi
      • Roberto Mauri
      • Ralph Zucker
    • Stars
      • Brad Harris
      • Esmeralda Barros
      • Marc Lawrence
    • 43User reviews
    • 29Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos8

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    Top cast13

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    Brad Harris
    Brad Harris
    • Burt Dawson
    Esmeralda Barros
    Esmeralda Barros
    • Eva - The Savage Girl
    Marc Lawrence
    Marc Lawrence
    • Albert Muller
    Adriana Alben
    • Ursula
    Marc Fiorini
    Marc Fiorini
    • Robert
    • (as Mark Farran)
    Aldo Cecconi
    Aldo Cecconi
    • Theodore
    • (as Jim Clay)
    Paolo Magalotti
    • Turk
    • (as Paul Carter)
    Mario Donatone
    Mario Donatone
    • Forrester
    • (as Dan Doney)
    Miles Mason
    • Malik - The Gorilla
    Gino Turini
    • Turk's Goon
    • (as John Turner)
    Ursula Davis
    Ursula Davis
    • Diana
    Gianni Pulone
    • Payroll Robber
    • (as Bianni Pulone)
    Emilio Messina
    Emilio Messina
    • Mercenary Shot by Albert
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Roberto Mauri
    • Writers
      • Walter Brandi
      • Roberto Mauri
      • Ralph Zucker
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews43

    2.6991
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    Featured reviews

    reptilicus

    Talk about a misleading title!

    The Italian title for this film was EVE, THE WILD WOMAN which makes a lot better sense than the one attached to it for foreign distribution, KING OF KONG ISLAND. There is no king, no kong, and no island! This is the sort of plot that Republic might have made a 12 chapter serial about. A mad scientist is performing brain operations on gorillas deep in the jungle (NOT on an island) to create an army of simian slaves. Why is he doing this? Because he is a MAD scientist and that is what mad scientists do! Enter the hero (Brad Harris from several muscleman movies) and the heroine (Esmeralda Barros as the Eve, the title character) to defeat the madman and restore the natural balance to the jungle.

    Eve the jungle girl is topless for the whole picture but her long flowing hair is strategically arranged except at certain dramatic moments. Those gorillas with the stitches in their heads don't look like gorillas at all to me, they look like stuntmen in costumes! It takes forever for the plot to get going; in fact it starts like an action adventure with Harris' character as a mercenary looking for revenge against the guy who double crossed him. The science fiction element and the jungle girl subplot are introduced to wake the audience up later on.

    Perhaps if they had thrown in a dinosaur or two and a nice big explosion at the end. Oh well. I am off to watch the old 1944 serial THE MONSTER AND THE APE . . at least that one delivered what the title promised!
    3Chase_Witherspoon

    Rima the bird girl, Rambo and Ernst Stavro Blofeld meets the Planet of the Apes

    While there's something for everyone (almost) in this action sci-fi, it's unlikely to be your most memorable movie experience. Amiable he-man Brad Harris stars as a mercenary soldier who's double crossed by his medic companion (Lawrence) in a bungled heist, but survives to seek revenge upon the mad doctor now experimenting on gorillas with mind control programming.

    Aside from the shirtless Harris, flexing his body-built physique as he cavorts in a jungle pool, Tarzan style, there's also the scantily clad trio Esmerelda Barros (as a fabled native girl accompanied by the ubiquitous cheeky chimp), Adriana Alben (as Harris' sultry, former flame) and Ursula Davis as the short-shorts wearing pawn in Lawrence's diabolical plan to lure Harris to his lair for the purposes of programming him for mind control.

    There's a great dancing scene to showcase Harris' moves, a couple of violent ape attacks, some safari wildlife-spotting, and the promise of much more that never really eventuates. Like an early James Bond film meets "King Kong" or "Planet of the Apes", it has camp moments, but is mostly just clichéd and boring with an anti climax that's disappointing and uninspired.
    gavcrimson

    Gorillas at Cinecitta

    An Italian Spanish Co-production with America's own Dick Randall involved in the ‘presenting'- King of Kong Island mixes horror movie, nudie-cutie and jungle adventure with toppings of National Geographic stock footage- all set to a jungle beat of exotica. A mercenarie's life is a tough one- at least for Burt Dawson (Brad Harris) shot in the back by his ex-friend Albert Muller (Marc Lawrence) and left for dead. Albert retreats deep into the jungle where he performs brain operations on man sized gorillas and makes them his robot like slaves. Burt survives the shooting and vows vengeance, tracking down his ‘mad Doctor friend' in Nairobi. Reacquainting himself with his buddy Theodore, Burt is drawn back into Albert's orbit when Theodore's thrill seeking daughter Diana is kidnapped by the gorillas while on safari. Although forewarned that ‘you may find that it's actually dangerous to violate ancient taboos' macho Burt cannot be stopped and before you can say ‘let's grow a hairy chest, write books and shoot some elephants' Burt is venturing into the dark continent to put an end to Albert's monkey business. Amidst an almost comical amount of double crosses, secrets and revelations Burt has to fight off attacks from Albert's simian heavies, get his collar felt by a tribe of savages and also finds time to befriend Eva The Wild Woman (The Devil's Wedding Night's Esmeralda Barros). As Burt's guide explains ‘she is the daughter of the forest, she understands the language of the trees and the wild beasts, she appears in the morning with the sun who is her father, she has always existed like the forest itself with its ancient mysteries she is everywhere and nowhere'. And its the jungle woman with her power over the animals who proves to be the spanner in the works for Albert's plan to take over the world with his gorillas (as well as his kinky sideline in experimenting on women and locking them in cages). In the Sixties Italian cinema was going through a Golden Era and became a retreat for Americans and Brits who were either being kicked out or couldn't get a foot in the door of their native film industries. Dick Randall (1926- 1996) was no exception and by the time of King of Kong Island he was living La Dolce Vita in Rome. Randall a chubby, small guy with glasses, a pencil thin moustache and a penchant for huge cigars- is vividly remembered by friends and associates for his keen business sense matched by an equal sense of humour. Randall was never it seems above sending himself up either- witness his tour de force performance as a ‘pig with binoculars' in Bava's Four Times that Night or his cameo in 1986's Slaughter High where he lampoons his B-movie King image. As in The Bogeyman and the French Murders here Randall surrounds himself with a journeyman director hiding under a phony name, a memorable cast, and a crew well versed in the ways of them exploitation films including Bloody Pit of Horror's Ralph Zucker and Walter Brandt. If Italian horror films were the new rock n roll, Zucker and Brandt would have been the equivalent of first rate session musicians. The actual music itself by Roberto Pregadio is suitably ‘Congo Psychedelia', wildly inappropriate for any movie apart from one whose curious geography believes go-go discotheques can be found in the midst of a jungle (even today Pregadio's score still haunts the tracks of lounge music compilations). In retrospect King of Kong Island could be considered a throwback to jungle adventure movies of yore but perhaps only as Randall's doorman character in Four Times That Night might have remembered with every situation subverted to its sex-charged, exaggerated extreme. The introduction of Eva the Wild Woman is set to her running naked in the wilderness (in slow motion no less) to stress her ‘naturalness' a sequence reprised for the finale but not even this can match the priceless ‘va-va vroom' moment when the gorillas seemingly ogle Diana- watching her strip down to pea green underwear before letting their presence be known. Curiously many of these elements were downplayed on its Italian release which sold it on the value of matinee idol Harris with not a gorilla in sight, but as connoisseurs know all manner of insanity could and usually does happen in Italian movies of the period and King of Kong Island is hardly a sober exception to the rule. With its hodgepodge of oversexed women, Interpol agents, remote controlled primates, catfights and mad scientists conducting strange experiments in the jungle this was exactly the sort of ‘fantastique' escapism audiences would flock to in less cynical times. Today King of Kong Island is one of several Dick Randall productions just ripe for rediscovery. Fun, endearing and with as much God given trashyness as anything else Randall ever put his name to, King of Kong Island will have you mourning the era in the Italian film industry when vivid imaginations and spectacular traders ran amok.
    3mstomaso

    Standard mad scientist story with some additional subplots: For camp fans - A+, everybody else - D

    Kong Island, or Eva the Wild Woman is a little difficult to rate. From the point of view of campy b-movie fun, it's goofy and good, but basically, the film isn't really good. It does make more of an effort than a lot of similar films, and is, at times, actually interesting.

    Burt (Brad Harris) is double-crossed by Albert (Marc Lawrence, who gives a career-low performance) after a payroll heist in Africa (not an island). After an undisclosed time, Burt returns to Africa to reap revenge. But, as it turns out, Albert is waiting for him, with a small army of remote controlled gorillas. Add a few subplots and season with a generally attractive cast then half-bake for a few hours.

    Let's start with the worst aspects:

    With the exception of Esmeralda Barros and Mark Farran, the acting is abominable. Of course, the script didn't give any of the actors much to work with, and Ms. Barros (Eva AKA the Sacred Monkey) has a non-speaking role). Brad Harris is ripped, that's about all. I am sure he could have carried the production equipment, but he didn't carry the film. Marc Lawrence has done some interesting work, but his performance here is remarkably bad.

    The gorilla costumes are hilarious, and the actors in them are not particularly good at aping apes. The stock footage of African animals is not very well integrated into the action (especially the animals that are obviously living in captivity).

    And now, the OK:

    The story line is a bit better thought out than most b-grade mad scientist movies, and some of the characters actually seem to have personalities (though not necessarily consistent ones).

    The directing is OK. There are some pacing problems - with a few lengthy and unnecessary scenes of people walking through the jungle and safari trucks driving about. The camera work and editing are both pretty good, but there are a couple of rather glaring errors.

    And the good:

    I liked Esmeralda Barros' character, and felt that she should have been introduced into the film earlier than she was.

    Generally, the film keeps moving, and, with the exception of the ridiculous Brad Harris swimming scene (which happens just after one of his companions is murdered - always take a dip immediately after watching somebody get eviscerated, that's what I say), stays focused on the main story.

    Ursula Davis has very nice eyes.

    Campy B movie buffs WILL LIKE THIS. Can't recommend it for anybody else.
    2Hitchcoc

    No King! No Kong! No Science!

    One of the things I've discovered as I make my way through a bunch of B (or C), movies, is that they seem to plod along forever. We enter this film with a group of crooks turning on each other over some stolen money. As things unwind, we are introduced to a mercenary who was wounded by a man he trusted during the opening scene. He obsesses over revenge. We have a couple of women. One a kind of Rita Hayworth type without the good looks (no offense), and a sixties kind of go go dancing looking type, who can handle a rifle. Her father, who is the Ernest Hemingway type, and her brother live with these people. Anyway, there is a subplot of a mad scientist (why are they always mad?) who has done things to affect the brains of gorillas. They can then be controlled by the scientist (the odd thing is that it also transforms them into upright creatures that look like skinny men in cheap monkey suits). Through a series of convoluted plot developments and some deaths, some tribal unrest, a few organized gorilla attacks, the young go go dancer girl ends up in the clutches of the mad scientist. Somehow she ends up with less clothes on than she used to. The scientist ogles her and has future plans which we can only imagine. There's also a native woman who is a kind of queen of the gorillas. They love and respect her, and she always was able to talk to them and get them to do what she wants. Unfortunately, the brain thing messes this up. Need I go on, There is some ridiculous finale with people exchanging the upper hand. The only thing missing is the word "Aha!" My poorly written explanation actually makes the movie sound better than it is. Sorry!

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Although the U.S. version of the film was advertised under the title "King of Kong Island", its actual on-screen title is "Kong Island," even though the film has nothing to do with King Kong.
    • Goofs
      As Turk is assisting Albert in implanting a mind control device into a gorilla's head, his surgical mask is not covering his nose. This defeats the goal of having a germ-free environment for the procedure to eliminate possible infections.
    • Quotes

      Albert Muller: [to Burt Dawson] You're an excellent specimen of the human race - strong, clever, brave. That's why I've chosen you for my first experiment on a human being. You'll have the honor of being the first man to become my slave.

    • Alternate versions
      The Retromedia DVD release of this film has two versions of 'Eva, la Venere selvaggia' ('Eva, the Savage Venus') on it - 'Kong Island', a watered-down version of it that played in U.S. theaters in the late 1960s and 'King of Kong Island', the "uncut European version". The 'Kong Island' version looks the better of the two, but it is poorly panned and scanned and scenes of the thrill-seeking daughter's gorilla-observed striptease and the whole introduction of Esmeralda Barros' topless female Tarzan character have been cut, as well as several instances where Barros' long hair fails to hide her bosom. Despite Retromedia's hype of "See: chicks without their tops", these scenes are unlikely to rustle even the most conservative of collars nowadays. The 'King of Kong Island' version restores all these previously cut scenes, has a new title sequence and presents the film in widescreen. Unfortunately, this version of the film has been sourced from a Greek home video release and so it features large Greek subtitles and film quality which is below par for a DVD presentation. An uncut letter-boxed British home video release on the 'Intervision' label in the early 1980s started the film with its U.S. 'Kong Island' credits, but concluded it with the Italian end credits (!) that allowed for a reprise of Barros' slow motion nude jog and alluded to the film's Italian/Spanish/U.S. financing.
    • Connections
      Featured in Emperor JonWayne's Freaky Flix: The King of Kong Island (2024)
    • Soundtracks
      Eva's Beguine
      Written by Roberto Pregadio

      Performed by Edda Dell'Orso

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    FAQ15

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • 1971 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • Italy
    • Language
      • Italian
    • Also known as
      • Jungle 2000
    • Production company
      • Three Star Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 32 minutes
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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