14 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Very First Tarzan Still Packs A Mighty Punch, August 27, 2009
The fact that this film was made in 1918 and is silent doesn't matter a bit. It's actually more faithful to Edgar Rice Burroughs' fictional jungle hero than the Tarzans that followed. Elmo Lincoln strikes an impressive figure, looking very much like the way Frank Frazetta's later illustrations depict the character. Lincoln, who did all of his own stunts in this film, was the only actor to play Tarzan who actually killed a lion when the animal unexpectedly attacked him while filming a scene. The actor stayed in character by putting one foot on the lion's carcass and letting out a triumphant cry, and this amazing scene remains in the film.
Alpha's DVD is the most complete version available and the quality, which can be hit or miss with Alpha, is consistently very good throughout - definitely the best you're apt to see on this title. If you're a Tarzan and silent movie buff this is a must-have disc, plain and simple.
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
An Absolute Gem, October 3, 2004
I have this on DVD and it's a cracker. I can't understand the criticism of Elmo Lincoln. Some of the comments made border on the ludicrous. Him one big feller and looks like the very sort of guy to survive in the jungle! Perhaps viewers are getting too used to the current fad for 'Tarzan - Male Model'! (Did y'see the last 'TV' one? - aaargh!) My copy has an incredible soundtrack which uses extracts from old 78 records, which has been put together with such care an effectiveness that there should have been an award. A joy from beginning to end, I cannot recommend it highly enough.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The Original Tarzan Film, Still Fresh and Exciting!, June 24, 2010
1918's "Tarzan of the Apes" is certainly a novelty, the first full-length feature appearance of Edgar Rice Burroughs' legendary creation, and it's easy to laugh at the far-fetched ape costumes, exaggerated acting style of the era, and melodramatic plotline...but if you give the film a chance, you will discover a treasure, a production remarkably faithful to it's literary source, and quite well-made!
The film follows the book's early concepts fairly closely, as Lord and Lady Greystoke, unwilling castaways on the African coast (with Louisiana bayou country substituting for jungle), die, tragically, with their orphaned baby son raised by a female ape who had lost her own infant. The child actor portraying the young Tarzan, Gordon Griffith, is astonishing, nude for most of his performance, but very relaxed and believable. While barrel-chested, lantern-jawed Elmo Lincoln, 29, portraying the adult Tarzan, lacks Griffith's grace (the actor originally cast as the adult Tarzan, Stellan Windrow, was more slim and athletic, but was called into WWI military service, after filming some vine-swinging scenes, which were used in the film), he had a magnetism that was unmistakable, and commands the screen. His 'Jane', 24-year old film veteran Enid Markey, doesn't 'work' nearly as well, mimicking the eye-rolling innocence of the era's premier actresses, the Gish sisters. Traveling through the jungle with her scientist father (Thomas Jefferson...yes, that IS the actor's name!), she and Tarzan connect, and she gradually falls in love, despite her father's fears, an erstwhile suitor's evil manipulations, the pair's different lifestyles, dangerous jungle beasts (including a lion killed during filming), and unfriendly tribes.
While much of this may sound familiar (especially to fans of the first Johnny Weissmuller film), there is a freshness and simplicity to the 1918 production that later 'Tarzan' films couldn't recapture, despite bigger budgets and slicker production values. The film is a joy, and certainly worth owning!
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