

TARZAN X SHAME OF JANE IN ENGLISH MOVIE
“Felicity.”Įven Calvin Klein underwear model Fimmel has his Tarzanic precedent in Joe Lara, who modeled for Armani and Versace before starring in the 1989 TV movie “Tarzan in Manhattan” - yes, that does sound familiar - and the syndicated “Tarzan: The Epic Adventures.” Notwithstanding that he was already famous in underwear-model-watching circles, it is entirely likely that Fimmel will be merely the latest in a long string of actors - Lara, Elmo Lincoln, Jock Mahoney, Lex Barker, Gordon Scott, Mike Henry, Miles O’Keefe, Ron Ely and Weissmuller, among, I am afraid to say, others - who will eventually be remembered only because they once played Tarzan.īut the ride may last a while. At the same time, given that its main character is a naive longhaired beauty who remains in New York for the sake of a crush - for this Tarzan, it’s love at first sniff - the show it perhaps most resembles is. This latest Tarzan will be perhaps a little more unpredictable than those various forebears.
TARZAN X SHAME OF JANE IN ENGLISH SERIES
The natural man in the unnatural metropolis is the basis of works as diverse as “Crocodile Dundee,” “Ma and Pa Kettle Go to Town,” “McCloud” and that Billy Ray Cyrus series on PAX. We have seen much of this before, of course.

But it does not have any elephants, or much humor, or a sense of the absurdity of its premise. And it’s sexy enough - he’s the least-dressed character in modern fiction after all, and we get a good look at Jane’s navel as well. The 2003 edition has the edge on the 1942 in terms of raw excitement - the opening minutes, as the half-seen jungle king makes his first escape from urban captivity, are fantastically well executed and gripping as, for that matter, are all the action sequences. Except for a dead gorilla and those hungry dogs, there are no animals in it at all. Drummers in Times Square make him nostalgic for the old country. He goes to a restaurant inappropriately dressed.

Tarzan breaks through the window of a room in which he is being held prisoner and scales the side of a building. Jane Porter (Sarah Wayne Callies) first sees Tarzan (Travis Fimmel) as he shares a late supper with a pack of wild dogs in the East Village, having just escaped the clutches of his pathologically protective billionaire uncle, Richard Clayton (Mitch Pileggi of “The X-Files”), the head of Greystoke Industries and the man who has ripped him from his jungle home. In the premiere episode of the WB’s “Tarzan,” NYPD Det. “Jungle law easy.” There are elephants, lions and that crazy chimpanzee. “White man law lots of words,” says Tarzan. He breaks out of a room where he is being held prisoner and scales the side of a building. Tarzan is amazed by taxis and telephones. In “Tarzan’s New York Adventure,” Tarzan and Jane - and Cheetah, naturally - go to the big city in search of Boy, who has been kidnapped by evil circus men. To get some perspective on “Tarzan,” which premieres Sunday on the WB and relates the ape man’s adventures in the contemporary concrete jungle its natives call “Manhattan,” I watched “Tarzan’s New York Adventure,” a 1942 movie starring Johnny Weissmuller and a chimpanzee.
