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Queen of the Amazons

  • 1946
  • Approved
  • 1h 1m
IMDb RATING
3.7/10
903
YOUR RATING
J. Edward Bromberg, Robert Lowery, John Miljan, Patricia Morison, and Amira Moustafa in Queen of the Amazons (1946)
Jungle AdventureAdventure

A woman's husband has disappeared on an expedition into the jungle. She hires a guide to take her into the jungle to find him. However, they discover that he has been captured by a savage fe... Read allA woman's husband has disappeared on an expedition into the jungle. She hires a guide to take her into the jungle to find him. However, they discover that he has been captured by a savage female tribe.A woman's husband has disappeared on an expedition into the jungle. She hires a guide to take her into the jungle to find him. However, they discover that he has been captured by a savage female tribe.

  • Director
    • Edward Finney
  • Writer
    • Roger Merton
  • Stars
    • Robert Lowery
    • Patricia Morison
    • J. Edward Bromberg
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    3.7/10
    903
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Edward Finney
    • Writer
      • Roger Merton
    • Stars
      • Robert Lowery
      • Patricia Morison
      • J. Edward Bromberg
    • 39User reviews
    • 20Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos11

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    Top cast13

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    Robert Lowery
    Robert Lowery
    • Gary Lambert
    Patricia Morison
    Patricia Morison
    • Jean Preston
    J. Edward Bromberg
    J. Edward Bromberg
    • Gabby
    John Miljan
    John Miljan
    • Narrator…
    Amira Moustafa
    • Zita - the Amazon Queen
    Keith Richards
    Keith Richards
    • Wayne Monroe
    Bruce Edwards
    Bruce Edwards
    • Greg Jones
    Wilson Benge
    Wilson Benge
    • Professor
    Jack George
    • Commissioner
    Cay Forester
    Cay Forester
    • Sugi
    Vida Aldana
    • Tondra
    Hassan Khayyam
    • Moya
    • (as Hassam Kayyam)
    Darby Jones
    Darby Jones
    • Native Chief
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Edward Finney
    • Writer
      • Roger Merton
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews39

    3.7903
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    Featured reviews

    2Hitchcoc

    No Point Really

    I got this in a science fiction collection. I kept waiting for some technological or science oriented event to take place. This is a bad jungle movie. That's it. It's about a group of people who go to Africa to find some guy who disappeared during a safari into the bush. His fiancée is with the group. She gets to go along because of the way she handles a gun. We are led to believe that the women in this movie are formidable and capable. One can out shoot the male lead. However, when faced with danger, they shrink back and scream. The Amazon Queen is the same way. She has built a society in the jungle, showing no mercy at times, but when it comes time to confront the villain, all she can do is plaster herself against a wall and howl. The men are just as bad. Most of the film is stock footage from African newsreels. It allows you to get a sandwich between plot elements. At times it appears that the safari has about 400 native supply carriers. At other times they have about five. People get eaten by lions and killed with spears. A romance develops between the great white hunter and the other guy's fiancée. The evil Amazon Queen doesn't do much of anything except make idle threats. And when push comes to shove, she doesn't seem to have any power at all. What a worthless movie!
    7JackMay23

    A great time waster

    I just watched this film on my computer at work (on my lunch break). What I find amazing is how a whole movie could be constructed around some African safari stock footage and still be entertaining in a junky way. The 1940's stock character actors do their best to put the plot across and for me it works as a grade B campfest. The men are either handsome and stalwart or older and rather dithering and the women look great in that 1940's glamor sort of way. I love that all the jungle amazons look like they stepped out of a Hollywood beauty parlor in full make up. The action scenes are hilariously hokey and you'll have fun pointing out the mistakes in continuity. As the way to pass an hour I prefer this kind of fun trash to some TV reality show or CSI Wherever.
    4ebiros2

    Pretty entertaining

    Wife looking for her husband who disappeared on a safari finds her first clue in Akbar India, which leads to another safari in Africa. Her husband turns out to be living with a white woman named Zeta in the jungle, and he's not really interested in leaving.

    This low budget movie is surprising in that it really makes you feel that you're in the jungles of India and Africa. The African footages are beautiful and for that alone, this movie might be worth a watch. It also has the most scenes with tiger and lion actually wrestling a man - something we don't see n more modern movie.

    Acting and the entire mood of the movie is good. It's very watchable even if the premise of the story is little unbelievable.

    Although low budget, this movie is lot better than many modern fantasy movies that their artificial props takes away from the atmosphere.
    5FranklinTV

    Some old fashion brain fodder.

    It called Queen of the Amazons, its in black & white, and its shot in 1947. You should know exactly what you are about to watch.

    And if you watch to the end, you get to see a wonderfully bad stunt double replacement. In fact, one suspects on the day of shooting, they realized the mistake of booking two stunt doubles for the hero, and none for the baddie, but we still went ahead anyway with the shoot.

    OK - there is lots of stock footage, and plenty of time devoted to filming tricks performed by the monkey and bird, and any logic test would fail the plot; yet, its not a 'bad' film.

    I strangely enjoyed Queen of the Amazons, its much like the comfy Saturday afternoon black and white films I use to watch on TV 25yrs ago - it has a secret appeal to the 12 year old inside. It has a good pace, which stops you dwelling too long on the improbable of how they managed to justify the next piece of stock footage, or that the lion attacks involve the person holding onto the lion so he doesn't get away.

    But, I think my main reason for enjoying this was Patrica Morison; the feeling you are watching someone who is better than the material she has been given, but still gives the best within crippling limitations.

    I saw this on the TreeLine 50 SciFi DVD boxset - - so, invite a few like minded friends over for drinks and nibbles, sit back, and enjoy some old fashion brain fodder.
    6mjjh

    Don't expect too much and you may enjoy it.

    I saw this film on the science fiction classics DVD set, but knew that there would likely not be much science fictional in it -- after noting that it also contains "prehysterical" women or the Sons of Hercules films. There was a "bugologist" and some lessons in anthropology, which were quite fictional, even some unexpected dancing and poetry. It was fun, if like me you happen to like these kind of movies with corny, old-fashion, happy endings -- especially after a hard day's work thinking. The monkey and the raven did seem to be the most interesting actors, especially the monkey.

    There is even a serious side. It certainly reminds one of how things have changed since then in that then it was against the law to sell ivory without giving the colonial power its cut, while now it's supposedly illegal to do so to anyone at all.

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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

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The first poem recited by Gabby is "Three Fishers" by Charles Kingsley from 1851. Gabby's recited version has been shortened, and has wrongly substituted a few words like "town" instead of "tide," and "lamp" instead of "lamps."
    • Goofs
      Kybo is located in Australia, not Africa.
    • Quotes

      Narrator: The government is encouraging these sporting events because the people take such a keen interest in them. It's like baseball or football in our country. A tug of war is arranged between two bull elephants and the natives bet high on the outcome. Events like this are designed to keep their minds off of more *troublesome* matters.

    • Connections
      Edited into Dark Jungle Theater: Queen of the Amazon (2015)

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    FAQ6

    • Why does the title promise a story set near the Amazon?
    • What poem is Gabby quoting?
    • Who is Horace Greeley?

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • January 15, 1947 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Королева амазонок
    • Production company
      • Edward F. Finney Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 1m(61 min)
    • Color
      • Black and White
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.37 : 1

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