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Wild Women

  • 1951
  • Approved
  • 1h 2m
IMDb RATING
3.8/10
234
YOUR RATING
Wild Women (1951)
Jungle AdventureAdventureComedy

A small safari in Africa is captured by a tribe of white jungle women.A small safari in Africa is captured by a tribe of white jungle women.A small safari in Africa is captured by a tribe of white jungle women.

  • Director
    • Norman Dawn
  • Writer
    • Norman Dawn
  • Stars
    • Lewis Wilson
    • Dana Broccoli
    • Morton C. Thompson
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    3.8/10
    234
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Norman Dawn
    • Writer
      • Norman Dawn
    • Stars
      • Lewis Wilson
      • Dana Broccoli
      • Morton C. Thompson
    • 17User reviews
    • 15Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos14

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    Top cast14

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    Lewis Wilson
    Lewis Wilson
    • Trent
    Dana Broccoli
    Dana Broccoli
    • Queen
    • (as Dana Wilson)
    Morton C. Thompson
    • Kirby
    • (as Mort Thompson)
    Don Orlando
    • Count Sparafucile
    Clarence Brooks
    Clarence Brooks
    • Sungu
    Charlene Hawks
    • Owoona
    • (as Charleen Hawks)
    Frances Dubay
    • High Priestess
    Leah Wakefield
    • Head Conspirator
    Zona Siggins
    • Ulama Girl
    Devvy Davenport
    • Ulama Girl
    Mary Brandon
    • Ulama Girl
    Mary Lou Miner
    • Ulama Girl
    Barbara Reynolds
    • Ulama Girl
    Joyce Nevins
    • Ulama Girl
    • Director
      • Norman Dawn
    • Writer
      • Norman Dawn
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews17

    3.8234
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    Featured reviews

    Wizard-8

    More crude and primitive than usual

    Over the years, I've seen a number of these "Primitive female tribe meeting civilized men" movies, and I have to confess that I am not a fan of them. I like the IDEA of these movies, because the idea promises that there will be a lot of campy unintentional humor. But for the most part I find them a slog to get through. "Bowanga Bowanga" (a.k.a. "Wild Women") didn't do anything to change my mind about these films.

    For starters, I found this to be even cheaper and cruder than the usual cheap and crude nature of these movies. There is a TON of stock footage in the movie, and I suspect that the script was written AFTER the filmmakers got their hands on the stock footage and viewed it. The stock footage does show a couple of seconds of native African nudity (the only serious sexual aspect of the movie), and I admit I got a laugh that one stock footage clip showed a moose when the story is supposed to be taking place in Africa. But other than those two things, all the stock footage is just padding out a very thin story.

    As for the women in this movie, it takes quite a long time to really get to them, aside from a few brief glimpses in the first part of the movie. And once we properly get to them, they turn out to be a really boring bunch of females. Their history - how they got to be their way, etc. - is never explained. Their dialogue is so garbled at times that it's hard to make out what they are saying. Their native customs (dancing, etc.) are boring as well.

    One positive thing I can think about the movie - it's significantly shorter than other examples of its genre, so I was able to finish and put it in mind to forget about it quicker than usual. I'm already starting to forget it...
    Dethcharm

    "She Was A Vision Of Womanly Loveliness!"...

    WILD WOMEN (aka: BOWANGA BOWANGA) stars no one in particular and is about a safari through the "dark continent" of Africa.

    This movie's greatest assets are its preposterously erratic non-plot and its idiot dialogue. Absolutely nothing makes any sort of logical sense, with scenes seemingly tossed together in no particular order. This could be due to its being a patchwork of several unrelated movies stitched together. This only adds to the hilarity.

    An orangutan, foreign to the continent of Africa, wanders about for no apparent reason. A man in a go-rilla suit roams through for 10 seconds, before disappearing forever. A sudden flashback sequence features an Amish-looking boy's encounter with a "tribe" of white women in 1950's swimwear. Holding spears! Natives dance around while their chief jumps up and down with a big snake in his hands. Savage women run through the jungle, pouncing on unsuspecting adventurers. Annnd, on and on.

    Pure ultra-schlock gold!

    Nothing can possibly prepare you for the male vs. Female throw-down showdown!

    Blessedly short, this rivals other anti-classics like WILD WOMEN OF WONGO and MESA OF LOST WOMEN!,,,
    4driftdog

    If you start, stay to the end.

    Well, I will start with just why I give four stars. There are scenes with various wild animals in, trees and ?? That's as far as I can go. Now the movie, pretty bad really, over zealous acting and a class stereo typing (for its period) of tribal communities. Today it would (I believe wrongly) be called racist and a example of colonial control. I on the other hand feel it represents a part of movie history long consigned to the learning bin. It is however, another example of serious (for its period) sexism, not totally aimed, I feel, just at the female actors. Strange singing, dubious costumes and even worse, tan lines that are so bad even in black and white they are fully visible. To conclude, I recommend that if you are lost for something to do on a wet day, stick it out to the end.
    3punchinello

    No adventure - no excitement - just girls wrestling in swimsuits

    Abysmal pulp adventure exploitation in the jungle woman genre. Lousy audio thankfully obscures the dumb dialog. And it's awfully talky for a movie about people who don't speak English. There's no adventure to be found here; it's a jungle adventure with cliffhangers and one wild animal attack that happens in flashback.

    Three pale-face dopes wander the African wilderness and encounter warring man-hungry tribes of Amazons. These wild women have advanced out of the Stone Age only so far as to invent makeup, shoes, and underarm hair removal technology. Despite their desperation for "hus-bahnd," the ladies insist that they will fight the men and burn the weaker ones.

    The only thing of interest, as if there were any question, is the assortment of young women clad in animal skins cleverly designed like the bathing suits of 1951. Plenty of wrestling and bad dancing mixed with stripless 1950s stripper moves. No nudity or appreciable violence. On the other hand, you may be humming the catchy native song for days.
    5MartianOctocretr5

    Great camp for insomniacs

    I'm hoping whoever was involved with this foolishness 60 years ago was just kidding. It takes "exploitation movie" to the outer limits. The outer limits of Africa, to be exact. There, a mysterious band of Amazon beauties frighten the bejeebies out of their neighboring tribes.

    There's plenty of extraneous stock footage shot by some long-ago National Geographic safari tourists: I love that same hippo that floats by every few minutes in a river that is nowhere near the action taking place. There's also a curious chimp that is shown repeatedly watching something--I guess the Prehistoric women(?), as well as several other animals.

    Some guy named Trent who, as a boy, saw a blonde siren up on a mountain, wants to find these ladies, and gets two other comic relief guys from Brooklyn to join in the quest.

    The women are, like any women who have been cut off from civilization for generations, dressed in tailored leopard skin. They have their hair done in downtown Hollywood, carefully filed and polished nails, shave their arms and legs, and wear cool moccasins. Everybody has a spear and says, "huzzzzbennnndddd..." Also, the routine cat fights take place, and they worship something while dancing the Shake and Shimmy. How the Amazons got there in the first place is questioned, but never explained.

    This is a must-see for anybody who wants to see a movie that makes you exclaim, "Did they really make a film like this?"

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    Related interests

    Jack Black, Kevin Hart, Dwayne Johnson, and Karen Gillan in Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle (2017)
    Jungle Adventure
    Still frame
    Adventure
    Will Ferrell in Anchorman: The Legend of Ron Burgundy (2004)
    Comedy

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      The character name "Sparafucile" comes from the professional assassin in Verdi's opera "Rigoletto," and the song Sparafucile sings is also from "Rigoletto": "Caro nome" ("Dearest name"), sung by the heroine Gilda, whom Sparafucile kills at the end of the opera.
    • Goofs
      One of the animals shown in the stock clips is an elk, which is not native to Africa.
    • Connections
      Featured in L'Oeil du cyclone: Femmes violentes en bikini (1995)

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • September 23, 1951 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Bowanga Bowanga
    • Production companies
      • Continental Pictures
      • Norman Dawn Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 2m(62 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Sound mix
      • Mono

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