A girl searching a forbidding jungle for her missing father stumbles upon a savage jungle girl.A girl searching a forbidding jungle for her missing father stumbles upon a savage jungle girl.A girl searching a forbidding jungle for her missing father stumbles upon a savage jungle girl.
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Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaIn 1972 Ballantine Books hired Alan Dean Foster to write a novelization of the film, which had just been acquired for US distribution. However, at the time the only available copy of the script was in Italian, which Foster couldn't read, so the publisher arranged for him to view the film; but the print that was screened was also only in Italian, with no English subtitles. So Foster wrote a new novel from scratch, finding inspiration in the Frank Frazetta painting that the distributor had chosen for the US poster.
- GoofsFor a setting of African jungles, at around 48:28 - 48:44 (just after Luana playing with Isabel's bra), the scene shows a South American Scarlet Macaw and two Australians Moluccan Cockatoos living in the jungle.
- ConnectionsEdited into Barbie & Kendra Save the Tiger King (2020)
Featured review
An expedition travels across the African jungle in search for a plane which crashed many years ago. Leader of the expedition is George, played by Dutch actor Glenn Saxson (best known for "Django Shoots First"). He was once saved in the same area from an attack of weird natives with straw masks by jungle girl Luana. Luana (Mei Chen who played a small part in Jean Rollin's b/w classic "Rape of the Vampire") gets through the movie without a single word of dialog, but looks cute swinging from tree to tree. She secretly watches the members of the expedition, trying to understand their devices and customs, and radiates an innocent charm.
This is a cheap little flick with the typical ingredients inherited from Tarzan and Sheena and many (involuntarily) funny moments. It has the worst storm scene I've ever watched on a screen: 2 trees are wildly shaking their branches, while not a leaf moves on the others. The "lightnings" clearly are made with an electric lamp, quickly switched on and off. And besides, it seemed to me that every time there was a continuity problem, they cut in a scene with a monkey to distract the audience. Lest I forget, the man-eating plant was hilarious. For trash fans only.
This is a cheap little flick with the typical ingredients inherited from Tarzan and Sheena and many (involuntarily) funny moments. It has the worst storm scene I've ever watched on a screen: 2 trees are wildly shaking their branches, while not a leaf moves on the others. The "lightnings" clearly are made with an electric lamp, quickly switched on and off. And besides, it seemed to me that every time there was a continuity problem, they cut in a scene with a monkey to distract the audience. Lest I forget, the man-eating plant was hilarious. For trash fans only.
- unbrokenmetal
- Jan 19, 2008
- Permalink
Details
- Release date
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- Language
- Also known as
- Luana, the Girl Tarzan
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime1 hour 28 minutes
- Aspect ratio
- 1.66 : 1
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