Jungle Jim is forced to lead anthropologist Dr. Edwards into a land inhabited by giant people.
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I know there are a lot of negative comments on IMDb regarding the series of Jungle Jim movies starring Johnny Weissmuller in the early 1950's. Yes, they were low budget films, and Johnny couldn't act his way out of a paper bag if his life depended on it. Nonetheless, I find these films fun, as long as you check your mind at the door while watching them.This entry in the series has Jungle Jim (Weissmuller) helping a pretty female anthropologist, Dr. Linda Roberts, (portrayed by actress Angela Greene) find the land of the Giants, a strange group of people who snarl like lions and look like werewolves on growth hormones. Of course we have to have the requisite bad guy, who is played by Lester Matthews, a corrupt commissioner who is stealing ivory from tusks of elephants.I love these movies because of the outrageous acts of daring do we are supposed to believe...watch Jungle Jim wrestle underwater with a 2,000 pound hippo! See Jim go one on one with a black panther, rolling on the ground with it attacking him and emerge without a scratch, his khakis as clean and starchily pressed as if he just got them from the cleaners. It's hilarious, and all in good, clean fun.If you watch these movies knowing they are not to be believed, but just enjoyed, then you'll have a good time.
"In the Forbidden Land" seems to me to have a weaker and less focused screenplay compared to the other JJ episode I've seen (the one where he goes looking for a missing football player). Or maybe seeing another one helped me realize just how perfunctory and by-the-numbers this series really was. But the performances were about the same, and the effects and sound stages and liberal use of stock footage and white actors was about the same. Johnny himself still looked reasonably fit (for a 1950s actor who didn't know anything about modern theories of resistance training or nutrition) in his one extended shirtless scene, which is always good for a viewers' morale.Goofy mistakes and second rate production elements abound, of course. A hippo attacks a canoe and eats one of the paddlers (aren't hippos herbivores?).Jim alternates fighting a stuffed panther with stock footage shots of a real one snarling at the camera. "Giant people" from a lost tribe turn out to resemble werewolves (rather than "missing links"). Asian elephants are outfitted with tusks and ear prostheses in an effort to resemble African elephants (at least they knew the difference). There's random footage of "Tamba" the chimp being "cute" that has no connection to almost anything else in the plot and is just there because, hey, people expect a chimp sidekick for Johnny. And every one in the plot is rock stupid. The final third of the plot involves Jim being framed for murder (apparently the commissioner was supposed to think that Jim shot himself full of pentathol and clubbed himself unconscious) but not being allowed to explain what happened because they've gagged him. (The stated reason is that they don't want him to "call for help from his animal friends". The real reason is that the plot twist wouldn't last for 30 seconds if Jim was allowed to speak).Still, if you choose to watch a "Jungle Jim" adventure in this day and age, you either want to relive the experience of being 8 years old and watching a Saturday afternoon matinée, or else you are an archivist and collector of all similar things from that era. In either case, you parked your brain at the door at the beginning of the film. (I'm not sneering - I enjoy certain pop culture items from my childhood far more than they deserve on their actual merits.) So here you are: enjoy!
Gee, what would have possessed Jungle Jim (Johnny Weissmuller) to take on a hippo, and under water no less? That's one of the offerings in 'The Forbidden Land', as the jungle hero aids an anthropologist seeking the fabled Land of Giant People. When a couple of the 'giants' actually appear for the first time, my first thought was who might have raided Lon Chaney's Wolfman wardrobe. If you take all the Jungle Jim films together, this would have to be right up there with the goofiest, if not the most dangerous for Jim. He would actually have been a goner if not for chimp sidekick Tamba wielding a coconut bean ball when the male giant had him down for the count.For trivia fans, it's finally revealed here that Jim's home is near Ingaba Lake in the Wasabi District, even though most of his earlier stories took place in the Nagandi District. Or maybe he just moved. This film more than any of Weismuller's other Jungle Jim flicks looks like it was slapped together with as many elements as possible and as little coherence necessary to pull off the story. For example - 'The Old One', the wise old man of Tiku. In the scene establishing that he was blind, he fires off the film's cleverest line - "When eyes are dead, heart must see". That advice was never needed again.The story itself involves ivory poachers, merely tall 'giant' people, and Jim tackling the earlier mentioned hippo and a black panther. Oh yes, and he's injected with a truth serum to reveal the location of the giant homeland. It would be interesting to hear Weissmuller express his thoughts about the picture after being injected with truth serum.Keeping track of non African animals in an African setting? This one has a South American jaguar battling a bush hog. As for that black panther, it's hilarious to watch it turn into a stuffed animal and back during it's wrestling match with Jim; as always, no blood drawn against the intrepid jungle tracker.Second chances notwithstanding, Weissmuller tries to do as much as he can with the material he's given, but is shown to best advantage in his swimming and diving scenes. Not as trim as in his earlier Tarzan days, but still impressive enough. But can you really kill a hippo using just a knife?
The Jungle Jim movies produced by Sam Katzman and starring Johnny Weismuller were all low grade jungle adventures made strictly to fill the bottom half of a double bill. Unless you watch them out nostalgia or, are like me, a fan of Weismuller, they are pretty rough going. None of them seem to have been made with idea of making something good. The concurrent Tarzan films at RKO with Lex Barker, and the Bomba the Jungle Boy series at Monogram starring former "Boy" Johnny Sheffield, while not great, were at least reasonably well produced.JUNGLE JIM IN THE FORBIDDEN LAND is slightly enlivened by the presence of the strange "giant people." They are not giants, just very tall. They are supposed to be some kind of missing link. The makeup by Clay Campell is surprisingly good for such a cheap picture, but the only problem is that the "giant people" look more like werewolves than some kind of "missing link". Otherwise, JUNGLE JIM IN THE FORBIDDEN is just another Jungle Jim movie with the usual perfunctory performances, light skinned Africans, Columbia backlot jungle, stock footage, Tamba's hijinks etc.