TARZAN AND THE LOST SAFARI (1957)

 

PHENOMENALITY: *uncanny*
MYTHICITY: *fair*
FRYEAN MYTHOS: *adventure*
CAMPBELLIAN FUNCTION: *psychological, sociological*



SAFARI is a little better.  A private plane crashes in the jungle, and Tarzan tries to take the ersatz "safari" to civilization against the wishes of a scheming white hunter and a sacrifice-happy band of natives.  For some strange reason the scripter decided to call the natives "Opar men." The name is is certainly derived from ER Burroughs' name for a savage but far more fascinating tribe in his books, but it seems a pretty pointless use of the name, lacking any real resonance.

The core of the conflict in SAFARI, such as it is, is a marital conflict between the plane's pilot Dick Penrod and his wife, the aptly named Diana.  It's suggested, in a very G-rated manner, that Diana may contemplate messing around on her man, either with Tarzan (who has a short speech about how women ought to come when their men call them) or with the villainous white hunter.  The most mythic scene is one of the few in which the film emulates the Weismuller swimming-scenes.  Diana and her frowsy female companion Gamage (four times married, she says) ogle Tarzan as he catches fish in a waterfall; for once making explicit the visual feast Tarzan allows for hetero female viewers.  ("I like the way it ripples," says Gamage, only apparently speaking of the waterfall.)  Then Diana goes for a swim with Tarzan which, though technically chaste, can't help but evoke the old Weismuller/O'Sullivan water-ballets, which almost always signified sexual congress.  But despite Gamage's example of rapacious femininity, Diana reconciles with her husband.  Needless to say, the safari is saved from becoming a routine jungle-sacrifice.

Still, SAFARI's mythic moment still doesn't make for much of a film.

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