Tarzan and the Great River (1967)

Tarzan and the Valley of Gold wasn’t the last Tarzan movie to be influenced by the ’60s James Bond phenomenon. Coming two years later, the series’ next entry, Tarzan and the Great River, also stars Mike Henry and opens with a groovy spy feel, but adds The African Queen and Apocalypse Now to its mix. The latter wouldn’t come along for another 12 years, so it’s probably more accurate to cite Joseph Conrad’s Heart of Darkness.

Either way, Tarzan takes a trip up a mysterious river to confront the mad, god-like ruler of a deadly cult. His ride is on a boat owned by Charlie Allnut-lookalike Sam Bishop (comedian Jan Murray) and his boy sidekick Pepe (Manuel Padilla Jr., who was also in Valley of Gold, but as a different character). There’s also a nurse (Diana Millay from TV’s Dark Shadows) who’s trying to get some medicine to a remote village that’s under attack by a jaguar cult and its leader, Barcuna (Olympic decathlon champion Rafer Johnson).

The Great River isn’t as over-the-top and sexy as Valley of Gold, but that’s what makes it so endearing. It has a different feel from its predecessor, mostly focused on the relationships between the travelers and their various reasons for going up river. There’s a great final battle between Tarzan and Barcuna, but what sticks with you is the movie’s humor and charm.

Boys may sleep with Valley of Gold, but they marry Great River. —Michael May

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3 thoughts on “Tarzan and the Great River (1967)”

  1. I don’t like this film. It waste too much time on the silly characters on the boat and their interaction with Tarzan collection of animals. By the time we reach the final of this movie, we forgoten the reason he started up the river in the first place.
    To compare this film to Heart of Darkness is wrong. There is no Heart of Darkness influence in this film at all.
    And lastly according to this film, there are Lions living along the Amazon river. That is just so silly. (Of course ERB had Tigers in Africa in the Tarzan Books)
    I like the most of the 1960’s Tarzans movies (from Tarzan Greatest Adventure on ) but this one fell like a fall back to everything that was wrong with Tarzan the 1950’s.

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