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7/10
Good action and surprising maturity in a film that sees Jame return
dbborroughs18 September 2010
Warning: Spoilers
Jane is back! Tarzan and Boy head off to pick her up on the boat from England. Along they way they save an Amazon from some big cats. Injured in a fall, Tarzan takes her home and talks his way out of being forced to stay. The meeting with Jane is as expected and after some introductions of new friends Jane, Boy and Tarzan head home. Unfortunately there are ripples from an Amazon bracelet that Cheetah found and Jane's new friends end up with. It sets them on a trip to the Amazon city...or would have had Tarzan agreed to take them. Tarzan refuses because he knows its all about the gold. Boy doesn't realize whats at stake and helps them find the city...and great danger.

Large scale Tarzan film looks in many ways more spectacular than the earlier and much larger budget MGM films. Its just cool that we have so many neat locations like the tree house, the river station and the Amazon city. It looks really cool and makes it feel like a solid adventure.

There is a maturity to this film that is missing from many of the other films. What I like about the film is it deals with the effect of Jane's being away and her return after years, there is the maturing of Boy and his need to learn more than Tarzan can teach him and there is the hardening of Tarzan as he watches coldly as some of the bad guys die horribly. Its several levels above what was happening in the MGM films and much better for it.

Worth searching out.
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7/10
One of the best adventures in the Tarzan series
NewEnglandPat30 July 2005
This jungle adventure was a popular Saturday matinée entry and has a simple but effective plot of archaeologists looking for a mysterious city of a warrior tribe of women. The white hunters are searching for wealth and riches believed to be in the domain of the Amazons and convince Tarzan's son to guide them to the hidden valley. Tarzan and Jane quarrel about Boy's involvement with the safari because the jungle man knows that the intruders are headed for trouble when they encounter the Amazons. Johnny Weissmuller was winding down in his role as Tarzan but is good as always as the king of the jungle. Brenda Joyce is okay in her first role as Jane and Johnny Sheffield is the troublesome youngster who disobeys Tarzan. Barton MacClane is good as the heavy and Cheetah is along for some scene-stealing fun.
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5/10
Jane Comes Home
bkoganbing4 June 2011
In the last two Tarzan films, the last one for MGM and the first one for RKO, the character of Jane was written out by having her go to the United Kingdom as a patriotic gesture for the war. Tarzan himself dealt with the Nazis in his usual manner in these last two films himself, Tarzan Triumphs and Tarzan's Desert Mystery.

Jane is now played by Brenda Joyce as Tarzan and his family are fully reunited now. She's bought some friends along headed by Henry Stephenson who is fascinated by a bracelet that Cheetah found for Jane. It speaks of an ancient legend of an Amazon tribe and a lost city.

Of course Tarzan knows all about it and he's been keeping the Amazons a secret. There ain't nothing in the jungle that he doesn't know about. And in Tarzan And The Amazons the usual common theme of all Tarzan films comes true. Outsiders only mean trouble, especially if they come from civilization.

Stephenson is a cultured scientist, but the rest of his crew have their own ideas. Folks like Barton MacLane, Lionel Royce, Don Douglas, J.M. Kerrigan, and Steven Geray see visions of untold riches. I think you can figure the rest of this story out.

Tarzan And The Amazons features Maria Ouspenskaya as the ancient Queen of the Amazons who exacts hard punishment for those who violate the sanctity of the Amazons, She's always good even in some really terrible films.

This like so many other Hollywood films with an African setting give us a pulp fiction view of that continent. It was only in the Fifties with King Solomon's Mines and The African Queen that we started getting a realistic view of Africa. Still Tarzan And The Amazons is entertaining enough in a pulp fiction sort of way.
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7/10
Relax Jane, it is just a stick of dynamite we use to catch fish
Ed-Shullivan25 July 2018
Well the story lines may be very predictable but you just can't beat a late night movie with Johnny Weissmuller, the five time Olympic gold medal winner playing in his recurring role of Tarzan. In this film the civilized city dweller Jane (played by Brenda Joyce) befriends a couple of so called archeologists who want Tarzan to take them to the fantasy world inhabited by the Amazon woman deep in the jungle.

When Tarzan refuses to be their guide and take these suspicious characters deep into the Amazon jungle, Boy (Johnny Sheffield) agrees to substitute himself as their jungle guide and direct them to the hidden fortress where the Amazon woman live and seem to thrive without men.

It doesn't take long for these greedy archeologists to show their true reasons for wanting to find the Amazon women's fortress, and that reason is for the treasures that the Amazon woman possess.

So the film contains family values, greedy treasure hunters, good looking Amazon woman, Tarzan to the rescue, and of course Cheetah the chimpanzee getting into his usual mischief. It is another very good action/adventure film for all the Tarzan fans out there.

I give it a solid 7 out of 10 rating some 73 years after the films original release date.
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7/10
Tarzan and the Amazons (1945) ***
JoeKarlosi10 August 2007
After a brief hiatus from the series, the character of Jane returns now in the form of the statuesque Brenda Joyce. Johnny Weissmuller's starting to get visibly older and the same may be said for Johnny Sheffield as Boy, who's voice is now changing and growing deeper. Still, this is a solid entry where a hidden civilization consisting of beautiful women (their queen is old Maria Ouspenskaya - the gypsy woman from THE WOLF MAN) begins to take action when greedy men stumble upon their secret domain, previously only known to exist by Tarzan. Good action, thrills.

*** out of ****
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7/10
"Sun like gold. Too much sun make people blind."
utgard1421 January 2015
The ninth movie in the Johnny Weissmuller Tarzan series (and third since the series moved from MGM to RKO) is also the first to feature an actress besides Maureen O'Sullivan playing Jane. In the first two RKO films, Jane was off helping with the war effort in England. Now it's time for her to come home but, alas, O'Sullivan wouldn't return to the part so it was recast with Brenda Joyce. Maureen is certainly missed but Brenda does a decent job and would play Jane for the remainder of the Weissmuller films. As I said, Jane returns home to Africa but she doesn't come alone. She brings with her some archaeologists who are interested in the lost city of the Amazons, a tribe of women warriors. Tarzan knows where the city is but won't tell them. If you've seen even one Tarzan movie before this, you should know the outsiders won't leave it alone. They convince Boy to lead them to the Amazon city, where they are not greeted with open arms.

I noticed Johnny Sheffield, the actor playing Boy, is in the middle of puberty by this point and his voice is noticeably deeper than the last film in the series. It's the sort of thing you probably only notice when you watch the series back to back. Sheffield's enjoyable, though Boy's a bit of a brat in this one. Cheeta, the series' regular scene stealer, is great as always. Henry Stephenson plays the kindly old lead archaeologist who has no clue how rotten his friends are. Barton MacLane makes a particularly slimy heavy. The Amazons are lovely young women in skimpy (for the time) outfits. Nothing wrong with that. Pretty Shirley O'Hara is the one given the most to do. Their leader is the awesome Maria Ouspenskaya. She's always a treat to watch. Nice sets and matte paintings. The Amazon stuff is lots of fun. As with all of the RKO Tarzan movies, this is a solid escapist adventure film. Nothing deep but good to watch on a lazy weekend.
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7/10
Amazon women in Africa: it makes no sense, but it's fun.
BA_Harrison26 July 2010
Once again, the African jungle proves to be THE place to find hot, English speaking women: not only is it home to Jane, who has finally returned from Europe after extensive plastic surgery and a dye job, and Princess Zandra of the hidden city of Palandria (from Tarzan Triumphs), but it's also where a tribe of gorgeous, brunette, man-hating Amazonian warriors live in secret, in yet another hidden city situated behind a huge range of mountains (quite how they got there from South America is never really explained).

When Tarzan refuses to reveal the whereabouts of the city to members of a scientific expedition, Boy stupidly decides to help them, and before you can say 'Ungawa', the Amazon women have themselves some new workers to toil in their fields. Unwilling to spend the rest of their natural lives in slavery, the men attempt a daring escape, but as they are leaving, several members of the expedition unwisely decide to help themselves to some of the tribe's gold and its not long before the angry women are in pursuit with arrows a-flying.

A definite improvement on Weissmuller's previous adventure, Tarzan's Desert Mystery, this film wisely goes back to basics with a standard jungle setting, untrustworthy outsiders, animal hi-jinx from Cheetah, and even a good old crocodile wrestling scene! It might not be all that original, but it's never boring. If the ending hadn't been so weak, with Tarzan turning up at the city long after the party has finished and happily collecting Boy from the Amazon women without a fuss, this film would have been a straight 7/10. Instead, I give it 6.5 (which gets rounded up to 7 for IMDb anyway!).
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5/10
Lost City of the Jungle
lugonian7 December 2004
TARZAN AND THE AMAZONS (RKO Radio, 1945), directed by Kurt Neumann, the first theatrical "Tarzan" release since 1943's TARZAN TRIUMPHS and TARZAN'S DESERT MYSTERY, and the third installment under Sol Lesser productions for RKO starring Johnny Weissmuller, brings forth some notable changes: Tarzan having a bigger waistline and sporting an upgraded larger sized loincloth, while Johnny Sheffield, not quite a teen idol yet, still the curly haired adolescent Boy of about 13 or 14, whose speaking voice no longer in a higher pitch of a child, coming close to the physical height of Weissmuller, sporting a darker colored but smaller sized loincloth. Most importantly, however, is the return of Tarzan's mate/wife, Jane, formerly played by the redheaded Maureen O'Sullivan at MGM, now enacted by the blonde Brenda Joyce. With Joyce tackling over the part, Boy no longer addresses her as "Mother" but by her first name. After two previous entries bearing World War II related themes and invasion of Nazis, the series returns to basic formula of white hunters on a friendly mission to become dangerous intruders to the Tarzan family when greed of gold is concerned.

AMAZONS opens with Tarzan (Johnny Weissmuller), his son, Boy (Johnny Sheffield) and their pet chimpanzee, Cheetah, setting out to meet with Jane, who is scheduled to return home from her trip in England. While rafting down the river, Tarzan rescues a girl from a lion attack. An ankle injury has Tarzan return Athena (Shirley O'Hara), carries her back to the secret city of Amazon woman in Palmeria ruled by a middle-aged queen (Maria Ouspenskaya). As much as Tarzan is the only outsider to know of this kingdom, Boy, who disobeyed Tarzan by remaining behind, secretly observes at a distance. After the reunion with Jane (Brenda Joyce), accompanied by archaeologists, Sir Guy Henderson (Henry Stephenson), Bannister (Barton MacLane), Anders (Don Douglas), Splivers (J.M. Kerrigan) and McClour (Steven Geray), Boy becomes fascinated by these visitors, especially after witnessing items new to him such as a microscope and their stories of the outside civilized world. Cheetah, who earlier obtained an emblem dropped by Athena, presents it to Jane. Sir Guy finds the emblem belongs to a lost Amazon tribe and asks Tarzan for help in locating them. He refuses and orders them to go. Not wanting his new friends to leave, Boy escorts them to the civilization himself, leading to all sorts of trouble in the horizon for all.

Aside from the standard routines normally found in "Tarzan" films, the writers of TARZAN AND THE AMAZONS toss in some routinely situations found in family life. Tarzan and Boy have their one-on-one arguments as any father would have with his son. Sheffield's Boy, who usually looks up to Tarzan in a hero worshiping sense, as would any little boy towards his father, show signs of adolescence by acting out his frustrations, questioning authority, namely Tarzan's. For Boy, who has known no other existence except roaming around half-naked throughout the jungle, boredom has now taken its toll, causing Boy to have an attitude, especially when finding the archaeologists more interesting in comparison to Tarzan. Tarzan, believing that Boy will forget these men, invites him to go hunting as promised, but Boy stirs up trouble by saying he never wants to go hunting with him again. Tarzan's frustration is sensed when breaking Boy's hunting bow. While this doesn't really make as strong a statement as father and son relationships are concerned, this does prove that these two characters are just like anyone else. In typical fashion when father and son are on non-speaking terms, it is usually the mother, Jane in this case, to come to Boy's aide, and not taking sides. Boy, showing no signs of wanting to burst out singing, "Oh, My Papa," can be just as stubborn than Tarzan. Tarzan believes Boy will eventually calm down and return home, unaware that he and the researchers are being held prisoners by the Amazons, never to be seen or heard from the outside world again.

What makes TARZAN AND THE AMAZONS worth viewing is the presence of famed Russian actress Maria Ouspenskaya playing the Amazon Queen. Short in size, slow in speech delivery, heavy accented, but no raving beauty to say the least, those familiar with her on screen personality normally feel her presence in any sort of motion picture. Henry Stephenson, who was earlier seen in TARZAN FINDS A SON, appears for the second and final time in the series, while Barton MacLane, most noted for his gangster roles or playing good tough guys in Warner Brothers crime dramas of the 1930s, makes an impressive villain in his first of two roles in the "Tarzan" series.

Light on action and long on dialog during its 76 minutes, TARZAN AND THE AMAZONS makes interesting character study and routine adventure for any juvenile crowd. TARZAN AND THE AMAZONS, along with the others in the series based on the characters created by Edgar Rice Burrough, at one time popular viewing on commercial television in mid-afternoon or after-midnight hours some decades ago, was resurrected on the American Movie Classics cable channel (1997-2001) and Turner Classic Movies (TCM premiere: June 4, 2011). Never distribute onto home video, it was put on DVD along with the other RKO Tarzans in 2009. Next chapter: TARZAN AND THE LEOPARD WOMAN (1946)(**)
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6/10
You know what's missing? Action!
dcb-49 January 2008
Warning: Spoilers
SPOILER ALERT! Come on. When I watch a Tarzan movie, I expect some action and there's hardly any in this film. Johnny is near the end of his reign as Tarzan, getting flabby and more than a bit bored. Brenda Joyce is pretty yet bland as Jane. And there's just way to much walking around and talking. Would have killed the filmmakers to find a way to have an exciting finale? All we get is Tarzan yelling "Boy!" That's it! Tarzan even chases off a lion rather than fight it when it threatens Jane! There aren't even any serious rope swings in the film. What happened to the good old days when Tarzan swung through the jungle? Now he swings down from his tree house and spends the rest of the time running.
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A Step in the Right Direction for the Series
Michael_Elliott1 August 2011
Tarzan and the Amazons (1945)

** 1/2 (out of 4)

Johnny Weissmuller's ninth time playing Tarzan has him and Boy (Johnny Sheffield) welcoming home Jane (Brenda Joyce) who also brings with her some archaeologists. They soon learn of a secret tribe of women (led by Maria Ouspenskaya) and ask Tarzan to take them to the ladies. He refuses but Boy agrees to take them not realizing that some of the men in the group have bad plans for them. This entry is certainly a step up from the previous, TARZAN'S DESERT MYSTERY but it's still a long ways off from the early films when the series was still with MGM. With that said, if you enjoy "B" movies and especially those with Tarzan, there are enough good moments here to make the film worth sitting through at least once. As you'd expect, the real highlight comes from the good-hearted performance of Weissmueller. No one would ever call him a great actor but what he lacked as an actor perfectly made him suitable to play Tarzan. If you've seen any of his future Jungle Jim movies then you know his line delivery was pretty poor but when you play Tarzan this actually helps things. Weissmuller might have played this role eight times before but it's clear he's still having fun with it and this certainly comes across and is quite apparent to the viewer. Sheffield is also pretty good in his role as Boy and shares a lot of chemistry with Weissmuller. Joyce certainly isn't going to make anyone forget Maureen O'Sullivan but she's cute enough in the part and her flirtatious ways with Tarzan were quite charming. The supporting cast includes Ouspenskaya (THE WOLF MAN) who is sadly underused, Barton MacLane and Henry Stephenson. For the majority of the running time we get the cheap thrills one had come to expect from the series. These range of lions going on the attack to the crocodiles who are constantly swimming after someone to do damage only to have Tarzan step in. These type of thrills are things we've seen before but they still work here. What doesn't work too well is that there's about 15-20 minutes where the viewer has to just sit still and listen to Tarzan refuse to help the men. There's a long stretch where nothing much happens and the film starts to drag here before finally picking up with the action packed ending. The female tribe run around in skimpy clothing for some sex appeal but I was curious how a group of all ladies were able to reproduce when none of them had ever seen a man.
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5/10
Jane, How You've Changed
wes-connors5 June 2011
Jungle king Johnny Weissmuller (as Tarzan) rescues sexy screaming Shirley O'Hara (as Athena) from some hungry felines. She turns out to be part of a group of similarly sexy White Amazon women in leopard skin one-piece suits. Apparently, the animals wanted their fur back. Soon after carrying Ms. O'Hara home to Amazon queen mother Maria Ouspenskaya, Mr. Weissmuller and cute son Johnny Sheffield (as Boy) welcome beautiful blonde Brenda Joyce (recast as Jane) into the wilds of Africa, after the her character spent two films nursing soldiers during World War II...

Ms. Joyce notices how much young Sheffield has grown, is politely mum about Weissmuller's expanding waistline, and has a hug for "Cheeta" the chimp. As it turns out, Harry Stephenson (as Guy Henderson) and the archaeologists bringing Joyce back to the fold become interested in finding the recently visited (by Weissmuller) Amazon kingdom. Villainous Barton MacLane (as Ballister) gets greedy and Sheffield's life is threatened. "Tarzan and the Amazons" is fairly typical for the series, with lovely background scenery and Ms. Ouspenskaya's women being the main attractions.

***** Tarzan and the Amazons (4/29/45) Kurt Neumann ~ Johnny Weissmuller, Johnny Sheffield, Brenda Joyce, Maria Ouspenskaya
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9/10
Brenda Joyce's Debut as Jane in Top-Notch RKO Entry...
cariart10 November 2006
TARZAN AND THE AMAZONS is closest in 'style' to the earlier MGM/Johnny Weissmuller 'Tarzan' films (offering a crocodile fight, a 'classic' safari with many more black extras than in any other RKO 'Tarzan' feature of the era, far above-average production values), and is most famous for introducing American Brenda Joyce as the new 'Jane', back from the war. Joyce, 33, blond and wholesomely beautiful, lacked Maureen O'Sullivan's intellectual 'spin' to the role, but worked well with the 41-year-old Weissmuller, while providing a mother figure for 'Boy' Johnny Sheffield that the predominately 'kid' audience could relate to.

With a cast of terrific character actors (including Henry Stephenson, Maria Ouspenskaya, and Barton MacLane), and a plot involving a 'lost' city of women (guaranteed to arouse male hormones), the end result is one of the best-remembered RKO entries, and great fun to watch!
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6/10
Tarzan battles hoards of scantily-clad white skinned hotties...in the middle of Africa!
planktonrules23 February 2011
Warning: Spoilers
Johnny Weissmuller made a name for himself as Tarzan at Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studio. However, and I am not sure why, Weissmuller and 'Boy' (Johnny Sheffield) jumped from this prestige studio to the less than stellar RKO--where the budgets shrank considerably as did the quality. The scripts got a lot more weird and the films became chock full of poorly integrated stock footage and animals that often weren't even African. Additionally, 'Jane' (Maureen O'Sullivan) remained at MGM and a new leading lady needed to be found. After having the character be 'off on vacation in England' or 'helping with the war effort' in a couple films, RKO decided to re-cast this character with Brenda Joyce--who bore little similarity to O'Sullivan.

Early in the film Tarzan happens upon an Amazon lady who is being chased by leopards. She's injured her leg and Tarzan insists on carrying her back to her Amazon city. However, apparently it's taboo to either leave the town or enter it if you are an outsider. Fortunately, the Amazon Priestess knows that Tarzan can be trusted and apparently he's the only outsider they ever let leave the city alive.

A bit later, Jane arrives from one of her many trips and brings with her some friends. Unfortunately, these hunters turn out to be headed for disaster when they see a bracelet left by the Amazon who Tarzan rescued--and they decide to try to find this Amazon kingdom themselves! But, Tarzan wisely refuses to help them--especially since some of them (Ballister in particular) are real jerks! Oddly, Ballister is played by Barton MacLane--the same actor who re-appears in "Tarzan and the Huntress" but he plays a different character--even though he dies in "Tarzan and the Amazons"! Considering that these two films were only made a couple years apart, you do wonder why they chose him for both films. And, now that I think of it, Henry Stephenson (a wonderful character actor) was also in "Tarzan Finds a Son!"--and was killed in that film--yet appears in this one a few years later! Despite these odd casting problems, this film actually turns out to be a pretty good one--though they never explain how a group of very white women happened to be living in the heart of Africa! The film lacks the bad stock footage of some of the other RKO Tarzan films and at least the black natives are black--and not Mexicans like in the studio's last film in the series (well after it had 'jumped the shark'). In addition, the film is well written and quite entertaining--one of the last ones like this in the series.
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5/10
Champion of the weight?
PeterJackson19 November 2000
Let me start by saying that I'm not very familiar with the TARZAN-films of the 30's, 40's and 50's, or actually: not with Tarzan at all. This film, only being the second I've watched recently is not a very good one. Classic story(Tarzan swings from tree to tree, rescuing people from wild animals and bad guys), cardboard scenery and not a very impressive Tarzan too.

This is in fact the biggest flaw of this film. I've seen Gordon Scott play Tarzan in the much better TARZAN'S GREATEST ADVENTURE and thought former swimming champion Weissmuller was the greatest Tarzan of all. I don't know if Johnny Weismuller always looked like he does here, but I can say that he doesn't look like a champion at all. There's no greatness in his performance at all, nor does he look like an athlete. I heard that he got tired after a few films more and decided to stop playing Tarzan, and this seems to be the case here already. One of the few good things about this film is Cheetah. What a great job of the animal trainers here! Great fun to watch, when Cheetah is on screen This, together with the fact that the film isn't very long(which is good, because there really isn't much story too), is the only thing why one should see this minor Tarzan-episode. 5/10
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7/10
A "B" picture with "A" for effort.
JohnHowardReid14 March 2018
Warning: Spoilers
Of the 14 Tarzan films produced by Sol Lesser, Tarzan and the Amazons is by far the most popular. The film was endlessly screened and re-screened for more than ten years on theatrical release.

The reason for this popularity is firstly its cast. Although well past his prime, Weissmuller is still identified as the number one Tarzan. And here he is re-united with Jane after an absence of two films and three years. Admittedly, Brenda Joyce is not Maureen O'Sullivan, but she continued to play the role in the next four films, finishing with Tarzan's Magic Fire in which Weissmuller himself had been replaced by Lex Barker.

Miss Joyce has a pleasant enough personality to make the horseplay and romance with the chunky, laconic Weissmuller believable. Sheffield is also skillful and credible as Boy. And then there is Cheta, up to her usual tricks and clever shenanigans. To round off these pleasant principals, a mildly unpleasant assortment of scientists and villains headed by Henry Stephenson of all people, Barton MacLane (no-nonsense, black-hearted), J.J. Kerrigan (a welcome touch of mildly amusing, even sympathetic, comic relief) and Steve Geray (also along for comic relief, but he is miscast and the effect is a trifle strained).

The second item of appeal is the story itself. Of all the Tarzan plots, those featuring forbidden cities have undoubtedly the most appeal. And here we have not only a hidden city, complete with a mysterious altar and idol, but a city staffed entirely by women (and 99% nubile ladies at that! though care is taken to keep all costumes well within the borders of a "G" certificate).

Although lensed on a limited budget with some obvious short-cuts in art direction and special effects, enough of the matriarchal city is up there on the screen to dazzle our eyes and senses. And as if this plot element was not exciting enough, Tarzan performs all his customary feats of swimming, swinging and fighting. That poor old rubber alligator is pressed into service once more, plus some familiar lion and panther stock shots. But there's a great deal that's exciting and original too: Cheta playing with dynamite, Tarzan bridging a tree-trunk across a gigantic chasm, Jane felled by a tree in a storm, the villains turning on Athena and themselves being picked off one by one, until the final duo meet their just end in quick-sand. The dialogue of course is the usual sometimes corny mélange: "Boy think too much - forget to laugh!" But in the skilled mouths of players like these (excepting Mr Weissmuller himself), who cares? The direction is pacy, polished, the photography skilful and attractive (even at times visually exciting: the first entry into Palmeria, the silhouettes outlined on top of the cliff), and the music both pleasant and appropriate. Production values are impressive.
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Among the weakest of the Weissmuller Tarzans
rick_711 March 2011
Warning: Spoilers
Tarzan and the Amazons (Kurt Neumann, 1945) is a pretty joyless third entry in the low-budget RKO continuation, following the very strong Tarzan's Desert Mystery. Boy (Johnny Sheffield) is being sullen and stupid - ignoring Tarz's best advice as he helps lead a dodgy expedition to a rich land ruled by women. Then Muscles has to go and bail him out. Wooden acting and predictable plotting sink it, after a reasonable opening. Brenda Joyce appears as the returning Jane - her first entry in the series - with Barton MacLane your arch villain. The cast also includes Henry Stephenson, as key supporting players of the '30s and early '40s find themselves somewhat slumming.
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6/10
Not Bad
Space_Mafune9 September 2002
This film is predictable and Johnny Weismuller is a bit out of shape. Despite this, the film is often quite enjoyable and fun. Just plain good old escapist fare with familiar characters and likable performers. Not a bad way to kill an hour and a half.
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6/10
Tarzan meets Wonderwomen
SnoopyStyle17 September 2022
Tarzan and The Boy are on a fishing trip. They encounter an Amazon woman in trouble. Tarzan brings her back to the hidden Amazon women's city. The Boy trails behind in secret. Jane has returned from London. Archaeologist Sir Guy Henderson has come on the same boat with an expedition crew. They are searching for the lost Amazon women city. The crew is more interested in tales of gold. Cheetah accidentally reveals a golden bracelet from the Amazonians. Tarzan refuses to guide the expedition. Jane and The Boy disagree.

Jane is a bit dumb in this one. Tarzan may speak in broken english but he makes perfect sense. He's speaking a simple truth about the lust for gold. This is actually a pretty good story for a B-movie. This is relatively good for this franchise. They probably grabbed plenty of stuff for the Amazon city set. It looks alright. The action is a bit stiff. There's a lot of killing which is a bit surprising but very fitting. I would have Tarzan kill those two men. In a way, he does but I would let him get his hands bloody. The last act is less thrilling than it could be. It's the light-weight nature of the franchise. It lets down an otherwise good episode.
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5/10
If Tarzan had had a pet cheetah, would he have called it "Chimpanzee"?
JamesHitchcock15 January 2014
Tarzan has appeared on screen in nearly a hundred films, mostly made in the thirties, forties and fifties; they were often shown on television during my childhood and were a favourite of mine. Edgar Rice Burroughs' character was originally a British aristocrat abandoned in the jungle as a baby and raised by a tribe of apes, but these aspects of the story were often omitted from the later films. The basic set-up is that Tarzan lives in the African jungle with his wife (or girlfriend- the question of whether they actually possess a marriage certificate is discreetly avoided) Jane, their unimaginatively named teenage son Boy and their more imaginatively, but confusingly, named pet chimpanzee Cheeta. (If they had had a pet cheetah, would they have called it "Chimpanzee"?) This particular episode came out early in 1945, so includes a patriotic sub-plot involving Jane's return from England, where she has been working as an army nurse.

As its title suggests, this movie concerns a tribe of Amazons living in a mountain fastness not far from Tarzan's lair. The Amazons have a rather unusual society; all of its members are female (again, the question of how they reproduce is tactfully avoided), and all are young and attractive apart from their elderly Queen. A group of explorers turns up in search of Palmyria, the lost city of the Amazons. Tarzan, suspecting their motives, refuses to assist them, but Boy, believing he is aiding the advancement of science, is happy to do so. It is left to Tarzan to sort out the problems which result when some of the explorers try to steal the Amazons' treasures.

The film is, officially, set in Africa, but the film-makers do not seem to have been aiming at realism, at least not of the zoological variety, because the creatures inhabiting this particular jungle include Indian elephants, South American monkeys, Australian cockatoos, deer (native to Eurasia and the Americas but not Africa) and Canada Geese (North America). In fact, the only continent not represented here is Antarctica, and that is possibly only because no penguins were available at the time. Even some of the authentically African animals we see, such as lions and crowned cranes, are natives of the continent's savannas rather than its jungles.

Another strange thing about the film is that nearly all the cast are white. Tarzan, Jane and Boy are white, as are all the explorers. Even the Amazons, drawn partly from Greek mythology and partly from the pages of a "Wonder Woman" comic, are all Caucasian. The only black characters we see are a few servants and bearers. In fact, although the film is set in sub-Saharan Africa not a single black actor has a speaking role. I knew that Hollywood operated an unofficial colour bar in the forties, but I did not realise that it went quite as far as that.

Before he became the cinema's best-known Tarzan, Johnny Weissmuller was an Olympic swimmer and won five gold medals in that sport. Truth to tell, if acting had been an Olympic sport he would not even have been a contender for a bronze medal, but he was cast more on the basis of his impressive physique than of his acting skills, and might have made more of an impression had he been able to deliver his lines in normal English. (Tarzan always speaks a sort of broken pidgin English, although Jane and Boy always speak normally). Moreover, his acting is no worse than that on display from a lot of his fellow cast members.

Despite some dodgy acting, dodgy zoology, banal plots and some covert racist assumptions, I have always had something of a soft spot for these old Tarzan films, doubtless based on my childhood memories. They have a certain innocence about them, taking place as they do in some idealised never-never land where good always triumphs over evil and the big man will always come swinging through the trees to sort everything out and put everything right. Although they were probably not made exclusively as children's entertainment, they have the sort of charm and sense of moral rightness which will always appeal to children, and to those adults who still remember their childhood with affection. 5/10
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6/10
Tarzan and the Amazons review
JoeytheBrit26 April 2020
Even a tribe of Amazonian starlets fail to elevate this Tarzan picture above the ordinary. Weismuller looks a little chunky in this one, and fails to notice the startling transformation undertaken by Jane while she was away.
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5/10
The Forbidden City of Amazons
profh-118 August 2023
Warning: Spoilers
En route to meet the returning Jane, Tarzan saves a woman from wild animals. He recognizes she's from Palmyria, a city ruled by Amazon women, which, clearly, he has been to before. Their law forbids anyone to leave, or any outsiders to enter, on penalty of death. But Tarzan is the exception, considered a friend as he has kept the location of their city a secret. (It might have been very interesting to see whatever his earlier adventure there had been.)

Trouble rears its head when Cheetah, who's developed a bad habit of stealing things, makes off with a gold bracelet belonging to Athena, the young woman Tarzan saved. Jane returns accompanied by an archeological expedition, but on seeing the bracelet (which Cheetah gave to Jane!), suddenly their plans change and they become obsessed with finding this "lost city", which Tarzan adamantly refuses to help them with. The real problem, however, is that he refuses to EXPLAIN to Jane & Boy WHY he refuses to help, and in an adolescent fit, Boy decides to lead the expedition there... not realizing it's either death, or life in slavery once they get there. And then of course there's the fact that most of the expedition wind up hungry for gold more than scientific knowledge...

Anyone who's watched the MGM/Sol Lesser/Sy Weintraub TARZAN film series knows that there's certain points where continuity is simply rebooted to a degree, as we find ourselves slipping from one version of the character to another. Usually, this takes place each time the lead actor is recast. Gordon Scott actually played 3 different versions all by himself! But here, it's clear to me continuity has altered between the 8th & 9th Johnny Weismuller films! It's not that Jane has been recast (blonde Brenda Joyce is actually more "authentic" than Maureen O'Sullivan ever was). It's that, Tarzan's treehouse (rebuilt!) is NO LONGER on "The Escarpment", that high plateau that was introduced in TARZAN THE APE MAN (1932) and was a part of each film in the "official" series right up until TARZAN'S DESERT MYSTERY (1943), when Boy looked over a map he'd drawn and mentioned it.

In this film, Tarzan, Boy & Cheetah go by river on a raft to a settlement to meet Jane-- and return home the same way, as does the expedition. The near-impassable mountain range, in this film, is the one beyond which the forbidden Amazon city lies! It surprises me that no one ever seems to bring this up. Between the notable lack of the Mutia Escarpment plateau, and the existence of the mountain range with the Amazon women city beyond, this film feels much more authentic to Edgar Rice Burroughs' version of Tarzan than any of the previous Weismuller films ever were. It's only a pity (perhaps) that we still have the "uneducated" Tarzan, and a "Boy" with no other name than "Boy"!

I've found myself a huge fan of Johnny Sheffield's character in these films ever since TARZAN FINDS A SON!, and in ...AMAZONS, you can see and hear he's really starting to grow up! Unfortunately, that came with the usual conflict between child and parents that was natural at that age, but in the jungle, one learns quickly. He was 14 here; a few more years and he'd start to qualify as a sex symbol (heh). In fact, I'm very much looking forward to getting ahold of the BOMBA THE JUNGLE BOY series on DVD as soon as I get to the end of the Weismuller TARZANs.

I have to agree with the reviewer who pointed out the irony that the Amazons use their men for slave labor, yet Tarzan considers them friends. Perhaps, like in TARZAN TRIUMPHS! 2 films before, he figures it's none of his business, as long as they allowed him to leave without killing or enslaving HIM. (Again, makes me want to know what his previous visit there was like.)

There sure were a lot of stunning matte paintings of mountain ranges in this one! It gave it more of a "fantasy" feeling than the MGMs. Then again, Sol Lesser was already leaning toward "lost cities" back when he did TARZAN THE FEARLESS (1933) and TARZAN'S REVENGE (1938)!
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8/10
Amazon Doth Come
flapdoodle6417 March 2014
Warning: Spoilers
This film was released in April, 1945, very close to the end of WW2, and likely reflects some of the sub-rosa anxieties of this period. Specifically, some of the allied service-men had already been mustered-out (due to wounds, etc.) and some had been rotated back the USA at the time of this film's production. So it was that many men, raised in a highly machismo and patriarchal society, found themselves contending with wives and girlfriends who had been empowered by wartime factory work, and children who had suddenly become rebellious adolescents.

And so it is that we find Tarzan contending with a secret society of matriarchal Amazons, fiercer and sexier than Rosie the Riveter, and with a rebellious adolescent son.

It is also fitting that this film marks the return of Jane to the Tarzan series. Intelligent Tarzan scholars can disagree as to who is the greatest Tarzan in cinema, but there is universal acknowledgment that Maureen O'Sullivan was the greatest Jane. Despite this, Brenda Joyce was an amiable replacement, wholesome-sexy and not obnoxious, and she fit with the peculiar chemistry of the Tarzan films, and so we like her.

The last 4 Weismuller Tarzan films feature titles that name female characters. Besides this one, there was 'Tarzan and the Leopard Woman,' 'Tarzan and the Huntress,' and 'Tarzan and the Mermaids.' Likely the producers were attempting to lure more heterosexual men and other lovers of female beauty into the theaters, to broaden the ape-man's appeal beyond the 12-year-old demographic.

This film is a little short on action, although we do get to see Our Hero fight a crocodile and we see an adequate degree of peril and hazard. To it's credit, the script calls for Tarzan to express several philosophical concepts, using his own unique modality of thought, which author Jose Phillip Farmer describes as being 'Tarzanic.' In one instance, Tarzan issues forth what amounts to a haiku, likening the dazzling effect of gold on human greed to way the sun blinds those who stare directly at it. In another instance, Tarzan issues this pithy gem: 'Every time men bring guns, men bring trouble.' There is a quality of mythology to this film which compensates for the reduced action, and this is something of an initiation rite for Boy.

Also, the Amazons are sexy.

A lot of people bag on the RKO Tarzans because they are smaller budget than the MGM's, and because Weismuller has a bigger gut, but such concerns are trivial. This film contains Weismuller, who still had the confidence, charisma, and conviction to be a convincing Tarzan, and whose portrayal of the ape-man was the most distinctive of all actors. I recommend this film for all fans of vintage B-movies and fans of Weismuller.
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3/10
Boring!
xnet9511 July 2010
I remember watching old Tarzan movies as a child, so I decided to check this movie out and see if they were as good as I remembered. What a mistake! This movie was boring beyond all belief. It was like watching Ozzie and Harriet in the jungle. The title is "Tarzan and the Amazons", not "An Intimate and Tedious Look at the Minutia of Tarzan's Family Life".

On the plus side, the time that was spent in the Amazon's hidden city was good. The matte used to depict the craggy mountains in the distance was mysterious and nicely done. The sets that show Tarzan traveling through those mountains showed the harshness and isolation of the area. The city, with its strange god and creepy priestess, was interesting. The big problem was that these sections only added up to about a third of the movie, while the boring family scenes took up the rest. The producer really dropped the ball on this one. There was so much potential wasted here. It could've been an imaginative romp through a strange world, but they chose to constantly show Cheetah fishing and acting like an idiot, and Boy sweeping the tree-house, and... Plus, the big dramatic ending seems totally rushed, and happens in a flash. If you blink, you'll miss it. It's like they said to themselves, "Oops, we spent too much time on the family stuff, we're at 1:15, we better cut it off now. No one will notice." Well, I guess they were right seeing how many "10" votes this lame movie got. Do you people actually think this deserves to be up there with Citizen Kane, the Shawshank Redemption, and the Godfather?

This is a lame movie with zealous and stupid fans. Don't waste your time with either...
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8/10
Amazons Kick Butt
T-278 January 2003
One of the very few Amazon films where the women warriors were both attractive and able to some butt. Right on (icon of raised clenched fist. Every other amazon film I have seen had the women warriors just parade around in ancient Greek military costumes and behave cutsey-wootsey when the men show up - they need a man after all. These Amazons were beautiful and well build but also willing and able to shoot those arrows and cast those spears when the enemy men showed up - though they still needed Tarzan to get them out of the scrap at the end, but hey, it is a Tarzan movie.
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Continuity comment is incorrect
billlucc5 May 2018
Warning: Spoilers
After Athena (Shirley O'Hara) is stabbed with the knife, you are able to see it when she is hitting the gong.
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