TARZAN, LORD OF THE JUNGLE-36-Tarzan and the Super 7 number 8—Episode 36 of the entire range
TARZAN, LORD
OF THE JUNGLE-36-Tarzan and the Super 7 number 8—Episode 36 of the entire range
TARZAN AND
THE WHITE ELEPHANT
“There will
be no slavery in my jungle!”
“Rhino
Riders! To the rear!”
PLOT: Tarzan
saves a young girl from Rhino Riders only to find that she is looking to
capture an infant White Elephant and takes it from its mother Callow. The girl Angora
is the child of the queen of Nivia who believes that White Elephants protect
her city from the Rhino Riders. Tarzan takes exception and tries to dissuade Queen Toria from separating the calf from its
mother, but she will not listen. Taking pity on the White Elephant calf, the
girl helps the White Elephant calf escape to reunite it with its mother....only
to be chased by the Rhino Riders. But the mother White Elephant with the help
of Tarzan rescues her. It was at this point that the Queen realizes no one
should separate a mother from her child.
After being
roped and brought by force to the city of Nivia, Tarzan doesn’t tell the Queen
that he came that way. Huh? She asks why he’s come to their city. Is she
unaware that her men roped Tarzan and dragged him here?
There are
many white elephants in Nivia currently in a large stable. They seem happy
enough.
Everyone in
Nivia seems to be blond but the queen who seems to have white hair.
Tarzan saves
Angora from the Rhino Riders again. How did these innocent cute white elephants
hold off the riders in the past when now they just flee and run away? The
Tarzan call is a bit…awkward here, shall we say? It doesn’t sound like Johnny’s
but maybe? Or maybe a facsimile?
This cartoon
seems to be set in a total realm of fantasy. I know Nakima is from the novels
but not sure how many other names, places, and characters are. I will say that
an army of Rhino Riders, a huge city of white elephants and warriors, and
warriors on elephants is an ambitious undertaking, even for an animated
cartoon, especially in 1979.
Tarzan uses the
word UNC to Callow a bit. Callow saves Angora, too.
While not
totally clear, the calf is either wounded in saving Angora or just tired? The
Queen tends to the calf. The soldier that reports that the white elephants are
weak seems to grow his hair from over his ears to shoulder length in the span
of a frame!?
Just as The
Queen seems about to bring bad news regarding the calf, the calf comes out and
is well? Or is that another calf? All well it ends well, it’s the calf. I
guess.
In what
seems to be a tired series, this is the last episode and Tarzan does call upon
the elephants to scare the riders away. He also knocked one down and used a
tree to knock others away. Tarzan, Angora and Callow seemed to forget and leave
the calf during the rescue of Angora. What?
In any case,
despite doing a lot, Tarzan seems…not to fight at all here. After seeing the full
ELY run and starting on the Wolf Larson run (in just two episodes viewed, he’s
kicked butt), this is jarring to say the least. I’m also sure a lot of animated
stock footage is used in this Filmation episode. Even so, for 1979 it’s not
terrible and has moments of imagination above and beyond. Yet it feels stilted
in comparison to today’s animation, especially AVATAR THE LAST AIRBENDER and
quite a few anime releases and other CGI motion movies. It hasn’t really dated
all that well but one can see where Filmation was coming from and what they
were trying to do. And there is a message here so we can give it a pass.
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