Don't listen to the Hype. It's awful
... View MoreIt's the kind of movie you'll want to see a second time with someone who hasn't seen it yet, to remember what it was like to watch it for the first time.
... View MoreThis movie tries so hard to be funny, yet it falls flat every time. Just another example of recycled ideas repackaged with women in an attempt to appeal to a certain audience.
... View MoreIt's a movie as timely as it is provocative and amazingly, for much of its running time, it is weirdly funny.
... View MoreDirector Kurt Neumann directed the horror classic "The Fly" but the dull Tarzan material here is nowhere as good as that classic. Despite a rather provocative title, this film doesn't have any She-Devils who look the Tura Satana or anything close. Instead, all you get is a lot fo stock footage of animals, jungles, and a boring story about ivory hunters needing to be stopped by Tarzan. One of the ivory hunters is played by George Sanders' sound-alike brother Tom Conway, so that's a bit fun. Its' also funny because Conway earlier played a great white hunter who tricks Tarzan into helping him find hidden gold. You'd think Tarzan would have learned his lesson the first time! Raymond Burr plays the main baddie, so that's a good thing, but there's not much besides Burr and Conway to recommend about this one. Probably a low point all the Tarzan pictures, which was also the last time Lex Barker played the role.
... View More***SPOILERS*** Lex Barker in his final role as Tarzan the Ape Man is kidnapped and tortured by a gang of Ivory poacher's lead by She-Devil Lyra, Monique Van Vooren, and held hostage by them. That's until he can bellow out his famous bull elephant, not ape, call to get the local heard of elephants to meekly get into line to have their precious ivory tusks amputated by the pouches. It's after Tarzan's luxury's tree-house, that didn't have fire insurance, in the jungle was burned down by the pouches with his wife Jayne, Joyce Mackenzie, and pet monkey Cheetah possibly perishing in the flames Tarzan felt that he had nothing to live for. And even welcomed death at the hands of his kidnappers lead by a whale like Vargo, Raymond Burr, who tried to get him to play along, by getting the elephants to turn themselves in, with them.It's when both Jane and Cheetah showed up alive that Tarzan agreed to give the bull elephant call only to have the elephants stampeded their intended killers into chopped meat not go quietly to their death. With Vargo getting the worst of it being crushed alive when the roof, of his headquarters, came crushing down on him. As for She-Devil Lyra she ended up getting hers not from the stampeding elephants but from her wimpy butter-fingered husband Fidel, Tom Conway,who in trying to prevent from getting trampled shot her , by accident, instead before the charging and out of control elephants did a number on him.Raymond Burr just back after staring in his last jungle film "Bride of the Gorilla" where he played the gorilla was excellent here as Vergo the 275 pound heavy who liked to throw his weight around and ended up getting a lot more weight, in being trampled to death, thrown at him instead. It was 4 years later after shedding some 75 to 100 pounds that a slimmed down looking Burr got the role as TV's Perry Mason that not only turned him, who up until then was always playing villains, not only into a good guy but also a TV icon and legend as well.
... View MoreTarzan and the She-Devil (1953)** (out of 4) Lex Barker's fifth and final time playing Tarzan is a rather strange one. In the film, ivory poachers (Monique Van Vooren, Raymond Burr) are wanting Tarzan to help him but when he refuses they try a different method. Poor Tarzan thinks that Jane (Joyce McKenzie) has been burned to death so in his depressed state he doesn't fight off the poachers when they capture him. They plan on forcing him to help but what Tarzan doesn't know is that Jane's still alive. TARZAN AND THE SHE-DEVIL has been called the very worse Tarzan from a major studio outside the Bo Derek version but I think that's a tad bit harsh. There's no question that it appears Barker was bored with the material and there's no question that we get one stupid scene after another but at the same time there are still a few decent elements here. I think the best thing going for the film is the performance by Raymond Burr. Everyone will always remember him for playing Perry Mason but he was a terrific villain and if you're unfamiliar with his bad guy roles you'd be doing yourself a favor by checking them out. He does a terrific job here playing the cool, laid back jerk who will stop at nothing to get what he wants. Burr just has a certain snake-like quality about him and you can't help but see he's having a ball being as bad as he can. Van Vooren is also quite good as the leader of the poachers who isn't afraid to use a wink to get her way. McKenzie, the fifth person to play Jane in this five film series, isn't all that memorable but then again her screen time is very limited. Barker turns in his worse performance as the ape man as you can tell he's bored out of his mind and it's easy to see he's not too interested in anything that's going on. The story itself is a rather weak one and the ivory poachers thing had been done before and put to much better use. When it's all said and done, this is perhaps the worst of the Barker films but the supporting characters keep the film going. Without then I might have agreed that it's one of the worst films out there but the villains are good enough to where "B" movie fans might want to check this out (after they view the classic MGM Tarzan films of course).
... View MoreFor the fifth and final Tarzan film starring Lex Barker it was not only back to the RKO back lot, but back to the old days when the natives that Tarzan was helping were not even black. In fact Tarzan spends most of the time in chains because he's broken hearted because he thinks the villains have killed Jane.Jane is played here by Joyce McKenzie and the trio of villains are Tom Conway, Raymond Burr, and Monique Van Vooren, the last being the she-devil in the title. No black magic does she use, simply some feminine wiles and an appeal to Tarzan that since Jane is dead, he can best help by making sure that her two male conspirators don't go too hard on the natives they've enslaved, especially Raymond Burr who is on a power kick.The trio is after ivory and they've captured a whole tribe of to do their heavy work as ivory hunting legal or not requires a lot of help.But as we know from many a Tarzan film in the past, the elephants are among his best jungle friends and they help out a lot in rescuing Jane and the natives and Tarzan later in typical elephant fashion. Of course the elephants are also acting on their own rational self interest since they have no desire to wind up piano keys.RKO did the first film with Gordon Scott as Tarzan and then bid adieu to the Tarzan franchise. With Scott the series began to get a bit more realistic in the plots and also reflected the new Africa emerging in the Sixties. Tarzan And The She-Devil is a piece of high camp, but that's about the only way it can be enjoyed.
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