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Jungle Woman

 
Movies:

Jungle Woman

  • Director: Reginald Le Borg
  • AMG Rating: star
  • Genre: Horror
  • Movie Type: Sci-Fi Horror, Jungle Film
  • Themes: Mutants, Mad Scientists
  • Main Cast: Evelyn Ankers, J. Carrol Naish, Samuel S. Hinds, Lois Collier, Milburn Stone, Acquanetta
  • Release Year: 1944
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 54 minutes

Plot

A strong contender for the title of Universal's worst horror film of the 1940s, Jungle Woman continued the melodramatic exploits of "Ape-Woman" Paula Dupree (Acquanetta from Captive Wild Woman) including seemingly endless "flashback" footage. (Captive, of course, had itself "benefitted" from plenty of stock footage courtesy of the studio's 1933 Clyde Beatty film, The Big Cage.) Poor Dupree is found roaming an all-too familiar back lot jungle and is once again captured by a scientist (J. Carrol Naish), who proceeds to torment the girl to death. At his trial, Dr. Carl Fletcher is acquitted when he proves that the girl was not only more simian than human, but jealously stalked the good doctor's lovely daughter (Lois Collier). Fletcher is acquitted after an excursion to the morgue, where the body of Dupree has indeed transformed into that of an "Ape Woman." The film's odorous repute, even among the most ardent Z-movie apologists, stems mainly from its overuse of stock footage and some notoriously rotten acting. The studio's "Scream Queen," first-billed Evelyn Ankers, basically walked through her repeating role as Beth Mason and the film's only comedy relief was provided by the patently unfunny Edward M. Hyans, Jr., whose eventual demise thus came as a true relief. Worst of all, Irish-American character actor J. Carrol Naish, who was between Academy Award-nominated performances in Sahara (1943) and A Medal for Benny (1945), delivered perhaps the only bad performance of his long career as the not-so-mad doctor. Acquanetta (né Mildred Davenport), a former fashion model claiming to be the result of a liaison between an Arapaho princess and British royalty, was allowed to speak this time around, a fact which hasn't exactly enhanced the film's reputation either. Starlet Julie London was lucky; her small role as one of Lois Collier's friends landed on the cutting-room floor. The third and final installment in Universal's "Paula, the Ape Woman" trilogy, The Jungle Captive (1945), replaced Acquanetta (who had become a "goodwill ambassador" to South America for President Roosevelt) with 18-year-old starlet Vicky Lane. The series' strongest critic at the time, John T. McManus, actually took Universal to task for spreading "Nazi propaganda" through the work of legendary make-up artist Jack Pierce. "In Mein Kampf," McManus wrote, "Hitler calls the Negro a 'half-born ape.' Jungle Woman illustrates the point, changing a Hollywood glamor girl into an ape and vice versa with the Negro stage inserted right where Hitler says...Apparently it is to be an annual outrage unless somebody passes a law against propounding Nazi race theories in America." Still much debated today, Jungle Woman has a certain notoriety for modern audiences. ~ Hans J. Wollstein, All Movie Guide

Cast

Douglas Dumbrille - District Attorney; Richard Davies - Bob Whitney; Nana Bryant - Miss Gray, Dr. Fletcher's Nurse; Pierre Watkin - Dr. Meredith; Christian Rub - George; Alec Craig - Morgue Attendant; Edward Hyans - Willie; John Carradine - Dr. Walters - in Flashback; Tom Keene - Joe, Fingerprint Man

Credit

John B. Goodman - Art Director, Abraham Grossman - Art Director, Reginald Le Borg - Director, Ray Snyder - Editor, Hans Salter - Composer (Music Score), Jack MacKenzie - Cinematographer, Will Cowan - Producer, Edward Dein - Screenwriter, Bernard Schubert - Screenwriter, Henry Sucher - Screenwriter

Similar Movies

Captive Wild Woman
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Wikipedia: Jungle Woman
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Jungle Woman
Directed by Reginald Le Borg
Written by Henry Sucher
Bernard Schubert
Starring Evelyn Ankers
J. Carrol Naish
Samuel S. Hinds
Lois Collier
Milburn Stone
Douglass Dumbrille
Acquanetta
Distributed by Universal Pictures
Release date(s) June 1, 1944
Running time 61 minutes
Language English
Preceded by Captive Wild Woman
Followed by The Jungle Captive

Jungle Woman is a 1944 horror film released by Universal Pictures. The movie features Evelyn Ankers, J. Carrol Naish, Samuel S. Hinds, Lois Collier, Milburn Stone, Douglass Dumbrille, and Acquanetta. This is, in effect, a sequel to Captive Wild Woman and was followed by The Jungle Captive.

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Copyrights:

Movies. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Movie Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Jungle Woman" Read more

 
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Jungle Woman at LocateTV.com

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