It may have been an older movie, since the Kookaburra is now extinct. What I will suggest is typing this in to Google, i'm sure you will find the answer.
Ah
A manipulated sound recording of the Australian Kookaburra bird
The iconic, stock dolphin sound you hear in every show since Flipper to the present dairy Queen commercial, and has even appeared in some movies, is the sound of the kookaburra played backward. The kookaburra is a bird from Australia.
Sci-fi author Edgar Rice Burroughs' Tarzan of the Apes, his first Tarzan story, was published in the year 1914.I am uncertain in saying that the story was first revealed to the public in a magazine publication in the year 1912.
"Tarzan the Ape Man" (1932).
Tarzan predates George by over fifty years. The first Tarzan story appeared in 1912 & the original George of the Jungle cartoons aired in 1967
The kookaburra has an unmistakable sound. A kookaburra sounds just like a human laugh. Sometimes they make this sound to make sure other kookaburras know their boundaries
The Kookaburra gets it's name from the sound it makes e.g kkoookkkaaBbburra
None of them do.
No. The raucous laugh of a kookaburra is quite unlike any other bird's call.
A manipulated sound recording of the Australian Kookaburra bird
The iconic, stock dolphin sound you hear in every show since Flipper to the present dairy Queen commercial, and has even appeared in some movies, is the sound of the kookaburra played backward. The kookaburra is a bird from Australia.
A kookaburra does not 'tweet'. Kookaburras are known for their distinctive territorial laugh. Even when they do not launch into a full-blown territorial laugh, they make a low chuckling sound.
Tarzan , by Edgar Rice Burroughs , made his first appearance in print in The All-Story magazine , October, 1912 whereas in film Tarzan first appeared in the 1918 film Tarzan Of The Apes .
Sci-fi author Edgar Rice Burroughs' Tarzan of the Apes, his first Tarzan story, was published in the year 1914.I am uncertain in saying that the story was first revealed to the public in a magazine publication in the year 1912.
"Tarzan the Ape Man" (1932).
There are four species of kookaburras, one of which is also known as the laughing jackass (but not by Australians). The Laughing Kookaburra and the Blue-winged kookaburraare the main species of Australia known for their raucous calls.In particular, the Laughing kookaburra has a distinctive and recognisable laughing call which is used to mark its territory. It sounds somewhat like the laugh of a person when the call first begins. It then increases in pitch to a higher, stuttering laughing sound.Click on the related link to listen to a kookaburra's call.
It is not known when the European settlers first spotted the Laughing kookaburra, but it would have been very soon after settlement began in January 1788. The Laughing kookaburra is vocal, and easily spotted when it makes its call. It was first described by French naturalist Johann Hermann in 1783.