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| TARZAN'S
THREE CHALLENGES (director: Robert
Day; screenwriters: Berne Giler/based on the
characters of Edgar Rice Burroughs;
cinematographer: Ted Scaife; editor: Fred Burnley;
music: Joseph Horovitz; cast: Jock Mahoney (Tarzan), Woody
Strode (Khan/Tarim), Tsu Kobayashi (Cho San, Prince's
Nursemaid), Earl Cameron (Mang), Salah Jamal (Hani),
Anthony Chinn (Tor), Robert Hu (Nari), Christopher
Carlos (Sechung), Ricky Der (Kashi); Runtime:
92; MPAA Rating: NR; producer: Sy Weintraub; MGM;
1963-UK) "This is the stuntman-turned-actor, the 44-year-old Jock Mahoney's second and final time playing Tarzan." Reviewed
by Dennis Schwartz Robert
Day ("The Green Man"/"Corridors of Blood"/"The Rebel")
directs with
workmanlike efficiency, and the script by Berne Giler remains
uninspiring but literate for such a pulp work. The
result is a watchable Tarzan, that maybe benefits from
a new look after all these years. The Sun Mai spiritual
leader Tarim (Woody
Strode) is
dying and chooses as his heir a young boy living in a
distant monastery, Kashi (Ricky Der). Tarim's jealous
brother Khan (also played by Woody Strode) demands that
his son Nari (Robert
Hu) be the
successor and threatens to kill the chosen heir before
he reaches the city to accept the honor. Since Tarim
feels he can't trust any local to deliver the heir
safely to the city, he follows the advice of a monk
living in Africa who recommends Tarzan. Before Tarzan
reaches the monastery,
Khan's goons attack his boat and kill his guide. The
Apeman loses his credentials and the map to the monastery, and is forced to
use the suspicious looking Hani (Salah Jamal), who might have been one
of the attacking pirates, as his guide. At the
monastery, the head monk puts Tarzan through a number
of tests to see if he's really Tarzan and man enough
for the job. After Tarzan shows his hunting skills
with a bow and arrow, his prowess in a strength
competition and answers a Zen riddle, he's allowed to
take his guide Hani, the child, his nursemaid (Earl Cameron) and a warrior monk named
Mang (Earl
Cameron) on
the mission. Then Tarzan must overcome the betrayal of
Hani, a couple of Khan henchmen who in their failed
attempt to get Kashi kill Mang, and other obstacles
from Khan. When Tarim dies the Chosen One can no
longer be touched, so he's whisked off to the city and
passes three challenges to show he's the reincarnated
one in the line of successors for Tarim. However,
before the kid gets the holy job, Khan argues for a
fourth test of strength and wishes to pit himself
against the kid. Kashi wisely chooses Tarzan to take
his place and the two adversaries engage in a knife
fight on a net over large kettles of boiling oil. With
Tarzan's victory, Kashi can now be declared as the
spiritual sovereign for his people. Of note, A baby elephant named
Hungry replaces Cheetah in the comic relief role
reserved for cute animals. REVIEWED ON 10/24/2011 GRADE: B- Dennis Schwartz: "Ozus' World Movie Reviews" © ALL RIGHTS RESERVED DENNIS SCHWARTZ |