THE NEW ADVENTURES OF TARZAN (1935) Bruce Bennett & Ula Holt | Action, Adventure, Crime | COLORIZED

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The New Adventures of Tarzan is a 1935 American film serial in 12 chapters starring Herman Brix. The serial presents a more authentic version of the character than most other film adaptations, with Tarzan as the cultured and well-educated gentleman in the original Edgar Rice Burroughs novels. It was filmed during the same period as the Johnny Weissmuller/Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Tarzan films. Film exhibitors had the choice of booking the serial in 12 episodes, the feature film (also called The New Adventures of Tarzan), or the feature film followed by 11 episodes of the serial.

The serial was partly filmed in Guatemala, and Tarzan was played by Herman Brix (known post-war as Bruce Bennett). The final screenplay was credited to Charles F. Royal and, from Episode 6 onward, also Basil Dickey. It was produced by Ashton Dearholt, Bennett Cohen and George W. Stout under the corporate name of “Burroughs-Tarzan Enterprises, Inc.” (which also distributed) and was directed by Edward Kull and Wilbur F. McGaugh.

SYNPOSIS
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.

The original version of the plot proposed involvement of munitions runners and government agents, focussing more on the super-explosive formula hidden in the idol. This was rewritten during production, but some elements remain, such as the otherwise nonsensical final chapter name "Operator No. 17" and Ula Vale's unexplained periodic use of disguises in the first few chapters. (Ula Vale was originally written as a government agent using "Operator No. 17" as her code name; this plot element was dropped from the revised script, but only after some scenes from the earlier shooting script had been filmed, along with the main title cards.)[1]

Several plot elements bring the characters together in search (and pursuit) of the Guatemalan idol known as The Green Goddess: Tarzan's friend D'Arnot has crash landed in the region and is in the hands of a lost tribe of jungle natives; Major Martling is leading an expedition to find the fabled artefact for a powerful explosives formula hidden within it; Ula Vale's fiancé died in an earlier expedition to rescue the artefact for its archaeological benefit, and so she starts one of her own in his honour; and Raglan has been sent by Hiram Powers, Ula's lawyer, to steal the valuable idol for himself. In addition to containing the explosives formula, the idol also holds a fortune in jewels.

Tarzan, Ula and Major Martling locate the lost city containing the idol and rescue D'Arnot from the natives who worship it in the 70-minute-long first episode. However, Raglan escapes with the Green Goddess and heads through the jungle for the coast. Tarzan and the others pursue him across the jungle, encountering many perils, including recapture by the natives to whom the idol belonged. The adventures end out at sea, where, during a hurricane, they are able to permanently secure the idol while Raglan is killed by another of Powers's agents because of his failures. The murderer perishes when the ship sinks.

Returning to Greystoke Manor in England with Tarzan, Ula consigns the explosives formula to fire in the final episode, where she and Tarzan also recount several adventures from the first part of the serial to an assembled party of friends and colleagues.

CAST & CREW
Herman Brix as Tarzan
Ula Holt as Ula Vale
Ashton Dearholt as P.B. Raglan
Frank Baker as Major Francis Martling
Lewis Sargent as George
Jiggs as Nkima
Dale Walsh as Alice Martling
Harry Ernest as Gordon Hamilton
Jackie Gentry as Queen Maya
Jack Mower as Captain Blade
Merrill McCormick as Bouchart

Directed by Edward Kull, Wilbur F. McGaugh
Written by Edwin Blum, Bennett Cohen, Basil Dickey, Charles F. Royal, Edgar Rice Burroughs (original character)
Produced by Edgar Rice Burroughs, Ashton Dearholt, George W. Stout
Cinematography Edward A. Kull, Ernest F. Smith
Edited by Harold Minter, Thomas Neff, Edward Schroeder, Walter Thompson
Music by Mischa Bakaleinikoff
Distributed by Burroughs-Tarzan Enterprises Inc.
Release date May 21, 1935 (US)
Running time 257 minutes
Country United States
Language English

NOTES

Chapter titles
The New Adventures of Tarzan
Crossed Trails
The Devil's Noose
River Perils
Unseen Hands
Fatal Fangs
Flaming Waters
Angry Gods
Doom's Brink
Secret Signals
Death's Fireworks
Operator No. 17

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