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Certainly, Tarzan has been around since then but has undergone a change between the standard adventure films of Johnny Weissmuller, Lex Barker, Jock Mahoney, Gordon Scott et al and various modern adventure tv series such as Tarzan (1991-4), Tarzan: The Epic Adventures (1996) and Tarzan (2003), which have tended to reinvent Tarzan as a long-haired warrior defending the environment and endangered species. Outside of these, there have been all manner of oddities that show that Tarzan has been experiencing some difficulties trying to find a new role in the modern age spoofs like Tarzan in Manhattan (1989), the softcore Tarzan the Ape Man (1981), his being paired with cute talking animals in Disneys Tarzan (1999), and the superb Greystoke: The Legend of Tarzan, Lord of the Apes (1984), which deconstructed the myth. This German-Australian co-production was an oddity an oddity in that it was a throwback to the 1940s-50s styled Tarzan movie. The story is a standard marshalling of the elements for a classical matinee Tarzan adventure lost cities, evil white treasure hunters, an abducted Jane and comic frolics with chimpanzees. Although, it is a Tarzan with a certain degree of modern spit and polish. It is one of the few Tarzan films to grant Tarzan his baronial Greystoke title it even opens with Tarzan about to marry Jane in the family castle and introduces Edgar Rice Burroughs lost city of Opar to the screen for the first time, while Jane is more liberated than usual and gets to wield a gun. There is also a higher fantastic element than there usually was in the old Tarzan films some poor CGI skeleton transformations and a routine climax filched from Raiders of the Lost Ark (1981). For all that, the production seems routine. The action is not terribly exciting, at most passable. Casper Van Dien makes for a thoroughly unconvincing Tarzan. With his lantern jaw and handsome looks, Casper Van Dien is certainly a good leading man type. He was cast in Tarzan and the Lost City just after having come from the lead role in Starship Troopers (1997) where he was seen as a new name star (something that his subsequent roles have failed to consolidate). He tends to pose rather than project any physical quality of heroism. What his Tarzan resembles more than anything else is an Ivy League college kid who is venturing out into the jungle for the first time, not someone who spent their entire life raised in the environment. Jane March makes for a girlish Jane. Most of the Caucasian supporting cast are clearly German actors, even though the script states they are British. Carl Schenkel was a Swiss-born director who made a number of other genre films, including the pornographic film Dracula Blows His Cool (1979), the festival-acclaimed psycho-thriller Out of Order (1984), the occult tv movie Bay Coven (1987), Knight Moves (1992) about a chess-playing serial killer, and Exquisite Tenderness/The Surgeon (1995) about a deranged surgeon.
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