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King of the Jungle

  • 1933
  • Approved
  • 1h 13m
IMDb RATING
6.2/10
257
YOUR RATING
Buster Crabbe and Frances Dee in King of the Jungle (1933)
Jungle AdventureActionAdventure

A white youth who is raised in the jungle by the animals is captured by a safari and brought back to civilization as an attraction in a circus.A white youth who is raised in the jungle by the animals is captured by a safari and brought back to civilization as an attraction in a circus.A white youth who is raised in the jungle by the animals is captured by a safari and brought back to civilization as an attraction in a circus.

  • Directors
    • H. Bruce Humberstone
    • Max Marcin
  • Writers
    • Charles Thurley Stoneham
    • Max Marcin
    • Philip Wylie
  • Stars
    • Buster Crabbe
    • Frances Dee
    • Sidney Toler
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.2/10
    257
    YOUR RATING
    • Directors
      • H. Bruce Humberstone
      • Max Marcin
    • Writers
      • Charles Thurley Stoneham
      • Max Marcin
      • Philip Wylie
    • Stars
      • Buster Crabbe
      • Frances Dee
      • Sidney Toler
    • 10User reviews
    • 12Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos18

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    Top cast31

    Edit
    Buster Crabbe
    Buster Crabbe
    • Kaspa the Lion Man
    Frances Dee
    Frances Dee
    • Ann Rogers
    Sidney Toler
    Sidney Toler
    • Neil Forbes
    Nydia Westman
    Nydia Westman
    • Sue
    Robert Barrat
    Robert Barrat
    • Joe Nolan
    Irving Pichel
    Irving Pichel
    • Corey
    Douglass Dumbrille
    Douglass Dumbrille
    • Ed Peters
    • (as Douglas Dumbrille)
    Sam Baker
    • Gwana
    Patricia Farley
    Patricia Farley
    • Kitty
    Ronnie Cosby
    Ronnie Cosby
    • Kaspa at age three
    • (as Ronnie Cosbey)
    Jackie the Lion
    • Lion in the jungle
    Robert Adair
    Robert Adair
    • John C. Knolls
    • (uncredited)
    Thomas Amos
      Florence Britton
      Florence Britton
      • Mrs. Edith Knolls
      • (uncredited)
      Don Brodie
      Don Brodie
      • Reporter
      • (uncredited)
      Leonard Carey
      Leonard Carey
      • Clerk at Hunting License Bureau
      • (uncredited)
      Nora Cecil
      Nora Cecil
      • Spinster in Park
      • (uncredited)
      William R. Dunn
      William R. Dunn
        • Directors
          • H. Bruce Humberstone
          • Max Marcin
        • Writers
          • Charles Thurley Stoneham
          • Max Marcin
          • Philip Wylie
        • All cast & crew
        • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

        User reviews10

        6.2257
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        Featured reviews

        7planktonrules

        Surprisingly good!

        During the 1930s-60s, Hollywood made a ton of Tarzan and Tarzan knockoff movies. A few of the Tarzan films (especially the ones with Johnny Weissmuller) were excellent...and most of the rest were pretty crappy...particularly the knockoffs. These knockoff and crappy Tarzan pics abound with terrible stock footage (often of animals not even native to Africa) and the plots are, to put is charitably, pretty dull. In light of this, I was shocked how much I enjoyed "King of the Jungle", a knockoff all the way...but a wonderful knockoff.

        The story starts out pretty much like Tarzan. Some parents bring their very young child to the African savannahs in order to go sightseeing. However, they are killed and the child is but a toddler. But instead of apes adopting the child, it's adopted by a lioness!! Now don't start complaining about how 'that's not possible'....it's not like it's very likely gorillas would successfully raise a child either!

        The child grows into a man (Buster Crabbe) and he is at home with all the lions. However, when some folks come to the savannah looking for lions, they accidentally also capture the young man. He is given the name 'Kaspa the Lion Man' and is taken to America in a cage!! Not surprisingly, he soon escapes but manages to meet a nice lady (Frances Dee) and she is able to convince him to go back with the folks...and she is hired to take care of him. Soon, Kaspa has learned to talk and is a bright, handsome guy....and he has a strong affinity for lions. He becomes the ultimate circus lion tamer--doing his job with no whip, no chair, no gun...just love for the animals. What's next? See the film....you won't be unhappy.

        This film is not without problems. The most obvious is the similarlity to Tarzan. It's too similar in spots and is truly a knockoff. There also are some godawful staged fights...such as when they have a bull and lion spar each other as well as later in the film when a lion and tiger fight. I don't think any of the animals were killed or seriously injured....at least in the footage you see...though it is cruel and irresponsible. However, it also has some amazingly good qualities....no crappy stock footage(!!!), a breathtaking finale at the circus as well as a wonderful and sweet ending. Overall, a lot more good than bad in this one...and it's no wonder Crabbe's next film was a movie serial...."Tarzan the Fearless".
        barron-6

        Entertaining Tarzan imitation

        Paramount's answer to Tarzan, with Olympic athlete Buster Crabbe as a child raised to adulthood by a pride of lions. The expected complications result when Buster and his furry pals are transported to a circus. Charmingly clumsy in its early scenes, the film builds to an exciting, fiery conclusion. Animal activists will wince at a brutal battle between some big cats, but otherwise it's very entertaining.
        7lugonian

        Kaspa, the Lion King

        KING OF THE JUNGLE (Paramount, 1933), directed by H. Bruce Humberstone, from Charles T. Stoneham's novel, "The Lion's Way," is an adventure story that capitalizes on the current success of TARZAN, THE APE MAN (MGM, 1932), that starred Olympic swimming champion Johnny Weissmuller. While it's quite evident for rival studios to come up with imitations of their own, this appears to have been the only one made during the height of all those "Tarzan" adventures and the long series of popular sequels and carbon copies. Paramount acquired its own Olympic swimming champion in the physique of Larry "Buster" Crabbe, much taller and broader shoulders than Weissmuller, in a Tarzan-like imitation as Kaspa, the Lion Man, but unlike "Tarzan," this one didn't develop into a "Kaspa" series in spite of it's somewhat left open conclusion.

        The story opens in the jungles of Africa where coming down a hill is a little boy (Ronnie Cosbey) in safari clothes roaming about by himself. He encounters little lion cubs, starts playing with them until the mother lion approaches. She carries the boy away, but eventually allows the youngster to continue to play with her cubs. This epilogue fades some twenty years showing the development of this little straight haired blond boy into a grown-up curly darker-haired jungle man sporting a leopard skin loincloth, roaming about the jungle helping his lion friends. Enter the white hunters who encounter this half-naked native who only communicates in grunts and groans. He's captured and caged up labeled as "what is it?" in a cargo ship bound for America along with the lions, where he is to be sold off as a circus attraction. However, close to port, Kaspa escapes his captivity, swims towards the city where he is soon noticed by spinster passersby taking a stroll through the park one day. They notify the police that they have spotted a naked man in the area. Pursued by the police, Kaspa enters into an open window to the apartment of Anne Rogers (Frances Dee), a schoolteacher, and her roommate, Sue (Nydia Westman). After offering him some food and seeing he could be tamed, especially since he's captivated by her beauty, Anne, after encountering Kaspa's captures, agrees to assume her new position in educating and civilizing the jungle man while becoming part of a lion act at the circus. In spite of his fame and fortune, Kaspa finds he's not happy with his new life and wants to return to Africa, taking the lions with him, but is faced with certain situations holding him back.

        In watching KING OF THE JUNGLE, one cannot help but compare this to the Edgar Rice Burroughs character. Unlike the "Tarzan" adventures, KING OF THE JUNGLE takes a different turn in not being set entirely in the jungle. It does consist of some wildlife scenes in the beginning, but nothing memorable nor climatic as those frequent crocodiles fights or native uprising in the Tarzan tradition. During its second half which finds Kaspa in civilization, he is taught to read, write and speak in an articulate manner by his teacher girlfriend (not like the MGM series where Tarzan speaks only in mono syllables), as well as abandon his jungle attire while off duty from the circus to go seen fully clothed, predating Weissmuller's trip to the Big Apple by nine years in TARZAN'S NEW YORK ADVENTURE (1942) which has Tarzan in Stone Jungle wearing fashionable suits. However, much of the true action in KING OF THE JUNGLE takes place in the circus portion highlighted by a fire blaze where Kaspa risks his life to save his caged animal friends, especially the lions.

        Although a good story, there's really no explanation to Kaspa's origins, who his people are, and why and how he, as a little boy of 3, ended up in the jungle of cubs in the first place. Could it be that there was an airplane crash, for instance, by which the youngster became the lone survivor? How did he acquire the name of Kaspa? Did scenes such as the aforementioned wind up on the cutting room floor before its theatrical release?

        Aside from Frances Dee as Kaspa's newfound mate, Sidney Toler as the circus owner, Irving Pichel and Douglass Dumbrille add fine support, along with Warner Richmond Barrat as the drunken circus worker responsible for the fire, and Patricia Farley as a circus employee/ flirt who has her her eyes on Kaspa, only to be told by the educated jungle man in his new English vocabulary to "Scram!" as she tries to get his attention.

        In the mid 1970s, aside from seeing this movie occasionally on commercial TV, I recall watching "Buster" Crabbe as guest on the long running "Joe Franklin Show," based in New York City on WOR, Channel 9, where he recalled KING OF THE JUNGLE to be the only "A" movie he ever made. Although Crabbe did lose out in playing Tarzan to Weissmuller a year before, he did enact the part in an independent chaptered serial and re-edited feature of TARZAN THE FEARLESS (1933). Much to the delight of Weissmuller fans, Crabbe never played the legendary jungle hero again. Two Tarzans, too many. However, Crabbe did leave a mark in cinema history playing "Flash Gordon" and "Buck Rogers" for Universal's weekly serial department.

        Out of circulation since it's frequent showings on American Movie Classics in 1989, KING OF THE JUNGLE, which runs at 70 minutes, is currently available on video by logging onto TVIDEO.com (***)
        6boblipton

        The Circus Is Coming To Town

        A British man, his wife, and their small boy go into the jungle. The adults are killed, but the boy is succored by lions to grow up to be Buster Crabbe. Discovered by men hunting for animals for the circus, he is captured and sold to Sidney Toler, who calls him Kaspa the Griendly Ghost.... I mean the Lion Man. When the ship pulls into San Fracisco, Crabbe escapes, but finds a refuge at the home of schoolteacher Frances Dee and her sister, Nydia Westman. Toler takes Miss Dee along, since Crabbe likes her, and she gradually teaches him English and falls in love with him.

        H. Bruce Humberstone directs Paramount's answer to TARZAN THE APE MAN, and while the story is very different, the characters fall into the same roles as in Burroughs' story. There are some nice circus bits, and of course, a big fire, with the elephants escaping into town. It's certainly not particularly brilliant, but it is the sort of solid, entertaining story that the majors could turn out in the period. With Robert Barratt, Irving Pichel, and Douglas Dumbrille.
        7arthur_tafero

        Every Bit as Good as Tarzan - King of the Jungle

        No, this is not a Tarzan film; the name of the hero here is Kaspa (and it is not a ghost movie, either). Kaspa was raised by lions and trapped by white bwanas to be taken back to New York (like King Kong). Some of the scenes are quite remarkable; especially ones with the young child Kaspa in the beginning of the film. However, the film could not possibly have the disclaimer that no animals were hurt or killed in the filming of this movie. Other than that unpleasant caveat, the film is immensely entertaining and good fun for the whole family.

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        Related interests

        Jack Black, Kevin Hart, Dwayne Johnson, and Karen Gillan in Jumanji: Welcome to the Jungle (2017)
        Jungle Adventure
        Bruce Willis in Die Hard (1988)
        Action
        Still frame
        Adventure

        Storyline

        Edit

        Did you know

        Edit
        • Trivia
          Buster Crabbe narrowly lost the role of Tarzan to Johnny Weissmuller, so he starred in this Tarzan "copycat" film.
        • Goofs
          Biggest plot hole is that a human being can not be bought and sold else it is human trafficking, illegal under international law. Also he could not enter or leave any country without a passport.
        • Connections
          Edited into Caged Fury (1948)

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        Details

        Edit
        • Release date
          • March 10, 1933 (United States)
        • Country of origin
          • United States
        • Language
          • English
        • Also known as
          • The Lion's Way
        • Filming locations
          • Busch Gardens - S. Grove Avenue, Pasadena, California, USA
        • Production company
          • Paramount Pictures
        • See more company credits at IMDbPro

        Tech specs

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        • Runtime
          • 1h 13m(73 min)
        • Color
          • Black and White
        • Aspect ratio
          • 1.37 : 1

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