Jungle Jim (1937) is a Universal serial film based on Jungle Jim, the
comic strip by Alex Raymond
Two
safaris enter the African jungle intent on finding a white girl who is
the heiress to a fortune. One safari, led by Jungle Jim, wants to make
sure she gets the news that she is now a rich woman and escort her back
to civilization. The leaders of the other safari want to kill the girl
so they can try to get hold of her inheritance themselves.
Columbia Pictures produced a series of 16 Jungle Jim B-movies from 1948
to 1956, set in Africa and starring Johnny Weissmuller, who had gained
fame playing Tarzan. In the last three of these movies, the name "Jungle
Jim" was not used, and Weissmuller used his own name, essentially
playing an idealized version of himself, as did cowboy stars Roy Rogers
and Gene Autry. This was because these three features were produced
concurrently with a "Jungle Jim" TV series starring Weissmuller produced
by Columbia's Screen Gems and the series had the rights to "Jungle Jim."
(The "Weissmuller" jungle character was otherwise indistinguishable from
Jungle Jim, and the final three films are commonly referred to as
"Jungle Jim movies" though that is not technically accurate.)
MOVIES LIST:
Jungle Jim Movie Serial - 12 Chapters (1936)
Jungle Jim (1948)
The Lost Tribe (1949)
Mark of the Gorilla (1950)
Captive Girl (1950)
Jungle Jim in Pygmy Island (1950)
Fury of the Congo (1951)
Jungle Manhunt (1951)
Jungle Jim in the Forbidden Land (1952)
Voodoo Tiger (1952)
Savage Mutiny (1953)
Valley of the Headhunters (1953)
Killer Ape (1953)
Jungle Man-Eaters (1954)
Cannibal Attack (1954)
Jungle Moon Men (1955)
Devil Goddess (1956)
These films were originally produced long before the advent of High Definition TV, therefore they are best viewed on a small screen. HD TVs tend to stretch and skew the picture. Set your HD TV on 4:3 aspect ratio. (That was the old TV format). Please do not expect DVD or Commercial level DVDs from these films. Email us for any additional info.
Bay’s Public Domain policy:
These movies are in the public
domain.
Thousands of Hollywood motion pictures are in the Public Domain because they
were released without Copyright Notices, never registered with the Library of
Congress, had improper or late registrations; or were not properly renewed under
the old requirements for films made before 1964.
The status of films registered from 1929 through 1956 is noted in 3 volumes of
Copyright Catalogs of motion picture registrations published by the Library of
Congress.