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Greystoke: The Legend of Tarzan, Lord of the Apes

 
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Greystoke: The Legend of Tarzan, Lord of the Apes

  • Director: Hugh Hudson
  • AMG Rating: starstarstar
  • Genre: Adventure
  • Movie Type: Adventure Drama, Period Film
  • Themes: Culture Clash, Fish Out of Water, Interracial/Cross-Cultural Romance
  • Main Cast: Ralph Richardson, Ian Holm, James Fox, Christopher Lambert, Andie MacDowell
  • Release Year: 1984
  • Country: UK
  • Run Time: 130 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: PG

Plot

Greystoke: The Legend of Tarzan, Lord of the Apes is a reverent retelling of the Edgar Rice Burroughs original, with a 1980s-sensibilities slant. Shipwrecked on the coast of Africa, Lord Jack Clayton (Paul Geoffrey) and his pregnant wife Lady Alice (Cheryl Campbell) attempt to survive in the hostile environment, but both die shortly after the birth of their son John. Abandoned in the wilderness, the orphaned John is adopted by a family of rather highly evolved apes, and raised as one of their own. Years later, John-now known as Tarzan, and now played by Christopher Lambert-comes across a party of white hunters. Rescuing one of the intruders, Belgian Captain Phillipe D'Arnot (Ian Holm) from a horrible death , Tarzan is taught to speak English by the grateful D'Arnot. Coming across the remains and possessions of Tarzan's parents, D'Arnot discovers that the Lord of the Jungle is actually the Earl of Greystoke. Brought back to England, Tarzan is introduced to society, where his crude, apelike manners offend everyone--except the likeable (and painfully senile) 6th Lord of Greystoke (Ralph Richardson, in his final film role) and Greystoke's American ward, Jane Porter (Andie McDowell, whose Southern-fried voice is dubbed by Glenn Close). Disturbed at the notion of Tarzan's inheriting Greystoke manner, his more greedy relatives begin plotting against him. But it is Tarzan himself who decides that he cannot adapt himself to England-especially after a painful reunion with his ape foster father, imprisoned in a science-lab cage. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

Cast

Cheryl Campbell - Lady Alice Clayton; Ian Charleson - Jeffson Brown; Nigel Davenport - Maj. Jack Downing; Nicholas Farrell - Sir Hugh Belcher; Paul Geoffrey - Lord Jack Clayton; Richard Griffiths - Capt. Billings; Hilton McRae - Willy; David Suchet - Buller/Prince Max Von Hesse; John Wells - Sir Evelyn Blount; Paul Brooke - Rev. Stimson; Glenn Close - Miss Jane Porter; David Enden - Captain; Tristram Jellinek - White; Roddy Maude-Roxby - Olivestone; Andrea Miller - Governess; Deep Roy - Primate Sequences; Kiran Shah - Primate Sequences; Philip Tan - Primate Sequences; Mak Wilson - Figs, Tarzan's Follower; Patsy Pollock; Alisa Berk - Kala, Primate Mother; Harriet Thorpe - Iris; Eric Langlois - Tarzan at Age 12; David Forman - Primate Sequences; John Alexander - White Eyes, Primate Leader

Credit

Norman Dorme - Art Director, Simon Holland - Art Director, Simon Holland - Supervising Art Director, Garth Thomas - Associate Producer, Peter Anthony Elliott - Choreography, Rona Brown - Consultant/advisor, Rick Baker - Costume Designer, Nic Ede - Costume Designer, John Mollo - Costume Designer, Shirley Russell - Costume Designer, Simon Channing-Williams - First Assistant Director, Ray Corbett - First Assistant Director, Hugh Hudson - Director, Anne V. Coates - Editor, John Scott - Composer (Music Score), Rick Baker - Makeup Special Effects, Stuart Craig - Production Designer, John Alcott - Cinematographer, Hugh Hudson - Producer, Stanley S. Canter - Producer, Ann Mollo - Set Designer, Peter Kohn - Set Designer, Albert J. Whitlock - Special Effects, Ivan Sharrock - Sound/Sound Designer, Michael Austin - Screenwriter, P.H. Vazak - Screenwriter, Robin Clarke - Music Editor, Edgar Rice Burroughs - Short Story Author

Similar Movies

The Emerald Forest; Iceman; The Wild Child; Rudyard Kipling's The Jungle Book; Nell; Tarzan and the Lost City
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Wikipedia: Greystoke: The Legend of Tarzan, Lord of the Apes
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Greystoke: The Legend of Tarzan, Lord of the Apes

Movie poster for Greystoke - The Legend of Tarzan, Lord of the Apes
Directed by Hugh Hudson
Produced by Hugh Hudson
Stanley S. Canter
Garth Thomas
Written by Robert Towne (as P.H. Vazak)
Michael Austin
Starring Christopher Lambert
Andie MacDowell
Cheryl Campbell
Ian Holm
Ralph Richardson
Nigel Davenport
Ian Charleson
Music by John Scott
Cinematography John Alcott
Editing by Anne V. Coates
Distributed by Warner Bros.
Release date(s) United States:
30 March 1984
Running time 143 min
Country United Kingdom
Language English
Preceded by Tarzan, the Ape Man
Followed by Tarzan and the Lost City

Greystoke: The Legend of Tarzan, Lord of the Apes is a 1984 British film directed by Hugh Hudson and based on Edgar Rice Burroughs' novel Tarzan of the Apes. Christopher Lambert stars as Tarzan (though the name Tarzan is never used in the film) and Andie MacDowell as Jane; the cast also includes Sir Ralph Richardson, Ian Holm, James Fox, and Cheryl Campbell.

Contents

Production

In a departure from most previous Tarzan films, Greystoke returned to Burroughs' original novel for many elements of its plot, updating the novel's story in the light of 1980s sensibilities and science. It also utilized a number of corrective ideas first put forth by science fiction author Philip José Farmer in his mock-biography Tarzan Alive, most notably Farmer's explanation of how the speech-deprived ape man was later able to acquire language by showing Tarzan to be a natural mimic. According to Burroughs' original concept, the apes who raised Tarzan actually had a rudimentary vocal language, and this is portrayed in the film.

Greystoke rejected the common film portrayal of Tarzan as a simpleton that was established by Johnny Weissmuller's 1930s renditions, reasserting Burroughs' characterization of an articulate and intelligent human being, not unlike the so-called "new look" films that Sy Weintraub produced in the 1960s.

The second half of the film departs radically from Burroughs' original story. Tarzan is discovered and brought to Cumberland, where he fails to adapt to civilization. His return to the wild is portrayed as a matter of necessity rather than choice, and he is separated forever from Jane, who "could not have survived" in his world.

In his book Harlan Ellison's Watching, Harlan Ellison explains that the film's promotion as "the definitive version" of the Tarzan legend is misleading. He details production and scripting failures which in his opinion contribute to the film's inaccuracy.[1]

Plot

The Earl of Greystoke (Paul Geoffrey) and his wife Alice (Cheryl Campbell) are marooned in Africa. Lady Greystoke gives birth to a son, then she dies and her husband is killed by an ape. Their infant son is adopted and reared by a family of chimpanzees as he grows up naked, wild, and free.

At age 5, Tarzan (Danny Potts) tries to fit in with his ape family. When a black panther attacks, he manages to learn how to swim in order to evade it while another chimp was killed (humans can swim while other great apes can't).

At age 12, Tarzan (Eric Langlois) discovers the tree-house in which he lived as a baby with his mother and father and finds there a wooden block, with pictures of both a man and a monkey (a chimpanzee) painted on it. It is there, after seeing himself in a mirror, that the physical difference between him and the rest of his ape "family" is discovered more fully. He later discovers a hunting knife and how it works. The objects fascinate the naked ape boy and carries them with him.

Years pass and Tarzan (still naked, but now wearing a hunting belt to hold his hunting knife) becomes the dominant male of the ape group. He protects and shows love toward his adopted "mother", "father" and siblings. He loses one of them to a bunch of natives.

Years later, a now half-naked Tarzan (Christopher Lambert) is found by Philippe D'Arnot (Ian Holm) who is injured by natives while exploring the surrounding jungle. Tarzan nurses him back to health and D'Arnot teaches him to speak some rudimentary English, albeit with a French accent. D'Arnot knows of the fate of Earl Greystoke and his wife and convinces "Jean" (the French version of John, the name of his father) as he calls him, to return to England with him to reunite with his family.

On arrival at Greystoke, the family estate, Jean is welcomed by his Grandfather the Lord Greystoke (Ralph Richardson in his last performance on film) and his ward, a young American woman called Jane (Andie MacDowell) who is engaged to a local nobleman and friend of Lord Greystoke, who is now elderly and has obviously suffered at the loss of his son and daughter-in-law years earlier, displaying eccentric behaviour and sometimes forgetting that John is not his son, but his grandson returned.

John finds it difficult to be seen as anything but a novelty by the local social set and some of his behaviour is seen as being somewhat threatening and savage. He befriends a young mentally disabled worker on the estate and in his company is able to revert to the more natural physical manners that he was used to in Africa.

Jane takes it upon herself to try to teach John more English, French and social skills (such as table manners and dancing) and the two become very close, making love one evening in secret.

Lord Greystoke seems to enjoy renewed vigour at the return of his grandson and, reminiscing about his childhood game of using a silver tray as a toboggan to travel down the large flight of stairs in the grand house, does so again with disastrous consequences. He dies, apparently from a head injury, in the arms of his grandson, who displays similar emotion and lack of understanding about death as he does earlier in the story when his ape "mother " was killed in Africa.

At a visit to the National Museum in London John is very disturbed by the crude displays of stuffed animals that he recognises from his upbringing in Africa and, slipping into rooms behind the displays discovers his ape "father" in a cage, having been captured in Africa and brought to England.

They immediately recognise one another and John breaks open the cage and escapes with his ape companion, releasing other caged animals as he does so, pursued by police and museum officials. They make it to a woodland park nearby but the ape is fatally shot and John is devastated to lose yet another whom he loves.

His overall failure to assimilate to human society forces him to make the decision to return to Africa.

Trivia

  • The dialogue of Andie MacDowell, who played Jane, was dubbed in post-production by Glenn Close because of her southern accent, apparently deemed insuitable for the character, though not to provide an English accent for her character as some have held, since the young Jane featured at the beginning of the film is American.
  • Screenwriter Robert Towne was slated to direct this film based on his screenplay, but he was sacked following the box-office failure of his directorial debut, Personal Best. Towne retaliated by demanding that the name of his dog (P.H. Vazak) appear in the screen credit for his screenplay. Ironically, P.H. Vazak received an Oscar nomination for best adapted screenplay.
  • Both Danny Potts (Tarzan, aged 5) and Eric Langlois (Tarzan, aged 12) were completely nude in all of their scenes.

References

  1. ^ Ellison, Harlan, Harlan Ellison's Watching. Underwood-Miller, 1989.

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