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The Golden Idol

  • 1954
  • Approved
  • 1h 11m
IMDb RATING
5.0/10
192
YOUR RATING
Lane Bradford, Anne Kimbell, Johnny Sheffield, and Kimbbo the Chimp in The Golden Idol (1954)
Adventure

It's Bomba the Jungle Boy to the rescue when the evil Arab chieftain Ali Ben Mamoud steals a golden idol from the Watusi tribe.It's Bomba the Jungle Boy to the rescue when the evil Arab chieftain Ali Ben Mamoud steals a golden idol from the Watusi tribe.It's Bomba the Jungle Boy to the rescue when the evil Arab chieftain Ali Ben Mamoud steals a golden idol from the Watusi tribe.

  • Director
    • Ford Beebe
  • Writers
    • Roy Rockwood
    • Ford Beebe
  • Stars
    • Johnny Sheffield
    • Anne Kimbell
    • Paul Guilfoyle
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.0/10
    192
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Ford Beebe
    • Writers
      • Roy Rockwood
      • Ford Beebe
    • Stars
      • Johnny Sheffield
      • Anne Kimbell
      • Paul Guilfoyle
    • 10User reviews
    • 5Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos22

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    Top cast16

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    Johnny Sheffield
    Johnny Sheffield
    • Bomba
    Anne Kimbell
    Anne Kimbell
    • Karen Marsh
    Paul Guilfoyle
    Paul Guilfoyle
    • Prince Ali Ben Mamoud
    Leonard Mudie
    Leonard Mudie
    • Commissioner Andy Barnes
    Smoki Whitfield
    Smoki Whitfield
    • Eli
    Rick Vallin
    Rick Vallin
    • Abdullah
    Lane Bradford
    Lane Bradford
    • Joe Hawkins
    Roy Glenn
    Roy Glenn
    • Gomo
    James Adamson
    • Ezekiel
    William Tannen
    William Tannen
    • Sergeant Reed
    Don C. Harvey
    Don C. Harvey
    • Officer Graves
    • (as Don Harvey)
    Bill Walker
    Bill Walker
    • Nadji
    Robert Bice
    Robert Bice
    • Gate Guard
    • (uncredited)
    Kimbbo the Chimp
    • Kimbbo - Chimp
    • (uncredited)
    Robert Lewis
    • Native
    • (uncredited)
    Tony Roux
    • Waiter
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Ford Beebe
    • Writers
      • Roy Rockwood
      • Ford Beebe
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews10

    5.0192
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    Featured reviews

    4utgard14

    "I'll bring the idol to you on a platter."

    After Bomba retrieves a stolen idol from Prince Ali, the prince hires a ruthless hunter to get it back for him. The hunter's no fan of Bomba's to begin with because Bomba has been freeing animals from his traps. Another Bomba movie starring Johnny Sheffield. As with so many of these, it's very talky and slow despite being a jungle adventure picture aimed at kids with short attention spans. There is a little bit of action but it's pretty standard stuff the series has done before and better. Regulars Leonard Mudie and Smoki Whitfield offer solid support. Anne Kimbell is the requisite pretty guest-star. She dons a bathing suit for a cute swimming scene; easily the highlight of the movie. Scenes from "Bomba and the Hidden City" are used as flashback footage in this, due to Paul Guilfoyle playing the bad guy in both. But the characters he played in the two movies are not the same. There's also the standard use of rear projection effects and stock footage that I've come to expect from a Bomba movie after having seen so many. There's very little to recommend here unless you're a huge Sheffield fan.
    4bkoganbing

    Watusi Deity

    The Golden Idol has the youthful Bomba The Jungle Boy in pursuit of a The Golden Idol that the Watusi tribe worships. Perennial movie villain Paul Guilfoyle plays the evil Arab sheik who stole the idol and he and Johnny Sheffield as Bomba have some history between them.

    Bomba is quite the jungle cop in his own way, throughout the twelve picture series always on the side of law and order which in this case is represented by Leonard Mudie as Commissioner Andy Barnes. Those tribes accepting British rule will always find a champion in Bomba.

    Allowance has to be made as the Bomba series was for the juvenile trade, but watching them as watching the Tarzan you would never know about the forces of anti-colonialism that were spreading like wildfire across the continent. Three years after this film was released, the British Commonwealth cut loose by mutual consent the Gold Coast colony which became the nation of Ghana. In the next several years new nations came in abundance. The Tarzan films accommodated the new reality eventually, but the Bomba series ended before all that.

    Anyway The Golden Idol shows a little wear and tear of the character as originality has left the series if it was ever there in the first place.
    Michael_Elliott

    Bomba the Tenth

    The Golden Idol (1954)

    ** (out of 4)

    Bomba (Johnny Sheffield) is back in action and this time he's trying to bring down the evil Prince Ali Ben Mamoud (Paul Guilfoyle) who is starting trouble in the jungle after trying to steal a valuable golden idol, which is very important to some natives who just happen to worship the piece. THE GOLDEN IDOL was the tenth film in the Monogram series and it's clear that it's far from a masterpiece but in terms of this series it's not too bad. However, that's really not saying too much as there really weren't any good films in this series. This one here at least has a couple fun performances but as with the previous films, way too much time is spent on silly stock footage and boring dialogue sequences that just keep going on and on. On the plus side you once again have Sheffield back in the lead role and it's clear that he was given a lot more effort than this thing deserved. He's quite good in the part but one wishes they had given him a better writer. I also thought Guilfoyle was good in his part and actually made for a very good villain. He played a similar role in a previous film and sure enough was the best thing in that. The rest of the supporting players are serviceable in their parts. Most of the action is the typical gunshots, tribes men running around type of stuff and none of it is overly exciting. At 71-minutes the film does drag in spots but this is the tenth movie so that's to be expected.
    3moonspinner55

    "It's a long run, my friends!"

    Tenth entry in the "Bomba" canon is a drowsily-paced adventure with Johnny Sheffield's resourceful, likable jungle boy the only point of interest--the villains all being cut-outs right off the series' assembly-line. A hunter is hired by the nefarious Prince Ali to retrieve the Golden Idol of Watusi, which he claims is his, stolen by Bomba. Turns out the Arab chieftain forcibly took it from a native, who was left for dead; Bomba promises to get it back. A nice swimming scene between a giddy Bomba and the resident pretty girl (Anne Kimball) is the highlight here, the plot and action being extremely tired. For completists, Bomba is bound and gagged (again), overturns a boat for an underwater fight and--in an amusing Ed Wood-like moment--allows a python to drown one of the bad guys. Regulars Leonard Mudi (as Mr. Barnes) and Smoki Whitfield (as faithful guide Eli) turn in their usual solid supporting performances, but this low-budget quickie would be nothing with Sheffield. *1/2 from ****
    5lugonian

    Bomba's Hidden Treasure

    THE GOLDEN IDOL (Allied Artists, 1954), Written, produced and Directed by Ford Beebe, based upon the character created by Roy Rockwood in the "Bomba" Books, marks the tenth installment of the "Bomba the Jungle Boy" adventures series starring Johnny Sheffield, and the second in the series distributed through Allied Artists. It also marks the return of Paul Guilfoyle, who appeared earlier in BOMBA AND THE HIDDEN CITY (Monogram, 1950), as the Emir Hassan. For this installment, Guilfoyle assumes a similar character under a different name, that as Ali-Ben Mamoud. As with THE HIDDEN CITY, his character rivals Bomba and wants to make him suffer as he made him suffer. Flashback sequences foretell what Bomba did to have Mamoud become his enemy, that along with underwater sequences and vine swinging scenes lifted from the earlier installment making those familiar with the series to believe they are watching THE HIDDEN CITY instead of THE GOLDEN IDOL, even when the results similarity different.

    The story begins in the village where ivory hunter, Joe Hawkins (Lane Bradford), arrives by jeep to meet with Ali Ben Mamoud (Paul Guilfoyle), who hires the most craftiest hunter in all Africa to help him retrieve the lost idol of Watusi that was stolen from him by Bomba, whom he classifieds as "The Jungle Devil." Flashbacks foretell what took place leading to the taking of the golden idol and hiding it in a safe place only known to Bomba. It is not known until later by Bomba (Johnny Sheffield) revealing to his friends, Deputy Andy Barnes (Leonard Mudie), Eli (Smoki Whitfield) and their archeologist visitor, Karen Marsh (Anne Kimbell), to collect the golden idol for her museum in England, that the villainous Arab had abducted the Golden Idol from the native witch doctor friend of his in Tanganyika where he endured torture from Mamoud for its reward. In the meantime, Hawkins, accompanied by his own safari, schemes in capturing Bomba by befriending and taking him into his confidence. He gets his chance by rescuing Bomba from the claws of a villainous lion. After joining Bomba and his safari, Hawkins reveals his true character by holding Barnes, Eli and Karen hostage until Bomba is forced to reveal where the golden idol is hidden. Bomba, however, has ideas of his own. Supporting cast include Rick Vallin (Abdullah); Roy Glenn (Gomo); James Adamson (Ezekial), Don C. Harvey (Officer Graves) and William Tannen (Sergeant Reed). Bomba's pet chimpanzee, Nakimda, is also on board for both comedy relief and rescue purposes for those in need.

    For a change of pace in the series, the female character assisting Bomba isn't a teenage girl accompanied by her father, but an older woman around in her twenties on an assigned mission. Another change in the series is having the close casting credits followed by the THE END title. Standard production with enough jungle chase scenes as a reminder to anyone who has seen THE MOST DANGEROUS GAME (RKO, 1932) about a crazed man hunting man rather than animals as his prey. What a good Bomba adventure this would have been with similar story casting Bomba fighting for survival to keep from being killed by a fast shooting hunter. Paul Guilfoyle makes a fine advisory to Bomba as Professor Moriarty is to English sleuth, Sherlock Holmes. Some good action scenes though low-budget production values prevent this from becoming a top movie edition, but not enough to label this as its worst either.

    Available on DVD, THE GOLDEN IDOL, which was formerly presented on commercial television in the 1960s and 70s, followed by Turner Network Television in 1992, can be seen occasionally on Turner Classic Movies where it made its TCM premier March 3, 2012. Next installment: KILLER LEOPARD (1954) (**)

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    Related interests

    Still frame
    Adventure

    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      In the main titles of the previous entry in the Bomba series (Safari Drums) the billing for star Sheffield was changed from "Johnny Sheffield" to "John," a tacit admission that the former child star was getting a bit long-in-the-tooth to continue to be billed with a juvenile name. In this film's titles, his billing reverts to "Johnny Sheffield."
    • Goofs
      Bomba (Johnny Sheffield) has claw marks on his chest right after the lion attack, but they disappear soon after and he remains unmarked for the rest of the movie.
    • Quotes

      Joe Hawkins: I'm not sure he's got the idol with him or he'd have produced it by now.

      Prince Ali Ben Mamoud: Then all we have to do is capture him and make him tell us where it's hidden.

      Joe Hawkins: Sounds simple but Bomba's tough. I'm not sure you can break him.

      Prince Ali Ben Mamoud: I'd enjoy trying.

    • Connections
      Followed by Killer Leopard (1954)

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • January 10, 1954 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Bomba und der goldene Götze
    • Filming locations
      • Los Angeles County Arboretum & Botanic Garden - 301 N. Baldwin Avenue, Arcadia, California, USA(jungle scenes)
    • Production company
      • Allied Artists Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 11m(71 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White

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