Meanwhile, Jane and the entire safari are confronted by the Men-Who-Eat-Lions, a hostile tribe of natives. To aid them in wiping out the safari, the lion eaters summon lions, which arrive in huge numbers. (Scenes with the massed lions were shot inside an enclosure measuring 300 square feet. Raw meat was used to give the impression that the lions were devouring victims that had been thrown down to them. At the end of one scene, the director told Louis Roth to remove the lions because the set was needed right away for another shot. To the astonishment of the people standing around, Roth entered the enclosure and drove the lions away from the half-consumed meat.) |
Monday, October 17, 2011
Tarzan And His Mate #22 (From Eric Beheim)
Posted by Buckles at 10/17/2011 06:20:00 AM
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1 comments:
I’ve seen this movie in its entirety twice. The animal scenes are beyond amazing, the trapeze act camouflaged in the jungle is movie history along with the beginning National Geographic type film on a blue screen as we are introduced to Africa. However, embarrassingly, I’ve seen the underwater scene over a dozen times. This was one of the first films I bought when I finally broke down and bought a VCR for Terri for Christmas. That year both in-laws also bought us VCR’s.
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