Product Details
Tarzan The Tiger (Silent)

Tarzan The Tiger (Silent)
Directed by Henry MacRae

Price: $7.98 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. Details

Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Ships from and sold by Amazon.com

17 new or used available from $3.64

Average customer review:

Product Description

Thrilling early jungle cliffhanger starring The Lord of the Jungle.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #70132 in DVD
  • Brand: Alpha Video
  • Released on: 2006-10-24
  • Rating: NR (Not Rated)
  • Aspect ratio: 1.33:1
  • Formats: Black & White, DVD, NTSC, Silent
  • Original language: English
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Running time: 90 minutes

Customer Reviews

Tarzan The Tiger4
Surprisingly good. Better than average music for early talkies. The story is good, however some of the cliffhangers are goofy. The star, Frank Merrill has one of the best physiques and worst toupees of any Tarzan. The female lead, "Lady Jane" played by what has to be the hottest babe Rotwang ever saw in a silent film, Natalie Kingston. It includes a nude swimming scene with Ms. Kingston. The story is fast paced with more depth than any serial Rotwang's ever seen and Rotwang's seen all the famous ones. Production values are surprisingly good. La, the Queen of Opar is appropirately kinky looking. Nizze trailer on the queen.

The camera work also gets very fancy with all kinds of tracking shots.

The one big down side is that in an attempt to look furious, Tarzan looks more like he pouting.

Rotwang says, "Check "er Out"!

A 1929 talkie serial based on Tarzan and the Jewels of Opar3
Despite what you might have been inclined to believe, the first time movie goers heard the sound of Tarzan's call was not in a Johnny Weismuller film, but in the 1929 production "Tarzan the Tiger," starring Frank Merrill as the Ape Man. This film was released in both a silent and a sound version, with the sound consisting of a musical score, sound effects, and a few lip-synched lines, all played on a record. Thus it was that for the first time Tarzan uttered his famous yell. Okay, this is not the famous yell, but it is the first one.

Despite the title and the oxymoronic idea of tigers in Africa, this serial is actually based on Edgar Rice Burroughs' novel "Tarzan and the Jewel of Opar" and is fairly faithful to both the plot and ERB's depiction of Tarzan as an educated man. The plot has Tarzan's estate being destroyed by the Arabs of Mohammed Bey (Paul Panzer) and Jane (Natalie Kingston) is sold into slavery by a bad guy (Al Ferguson) pretending to a scientist. Unfortunately Tarzan takes a blow to the head and develops amnesia, which makes him forget all about Jane when he meets La, Queen of Opar (Kithnou). That is until Jane goes swimming in what is the most memorable scene in this serial. The cliffhangers come fast and furious but if you take into account what year this was made they are more enjoyable.

This was Merrill's second appearance as Tarzan after 1928's "Tarzan the Mighty," which was an adaptation of "The Jungle Tales of Tarzan." There were plans for a third film based on "Tarzan the Terrible," but the studio did not think Merrill's voice was going to work when when talkies got going big time. This version of Tarzan is closer to the Elmo Lincoln style in the 1918 "Tarzan of the Apes," which means lots of lion skins instead of loincloth look that would be in vogue at the end of the pre-code period. Merrill also has the same muscular build as Lincoln, which would also be replaced by the Olympic swimmer ideal. "Tarzan the Tiger" is more of a historical oddity than anything else, but given all the really bad Tarzan movies out there, this one at least has its head above water.

Tarzan the Tiger, true to ERB's concept and story5
Tarzan the Tiger remains remarkably faithful to the original Tarzan and the Jewels of Opar. Extremely well done and obviously made for more adult tastes than modern tarzan epics.

One of the best tarzans on film.