Wednesday, July 08, 2026

JUNGLE QUEEN (1945 serial)

In 1939, just before the outbreak of WWII, Germans are worried about access to Europe through Africa and a number of Nazi spies are sent to Tambosa in British Middle Africa. Their mission is to take control of the Tongghili, a group of tribes coexisting under their ruling judge Tonga. When he is killed, the tribal elder Godac, by virtue of his possession of the powerful Sword of Tongu, is set to name a successor. The Nazis get the cooperation of Maati, who will serve as their puppet ruler, but Kyba is also in the running. Lord Bell, head of British espionage and known by most only as Mr. X, has agents in Tambosa trying to figure out who the Nazi leaders are and counteract their efforts among the locals. Unfortunately, a Nazi spy is listening in to all conversations in Mr. X's office and he reports to Dr. Elise Bork, outwardly the respected head of an experimental farm but actually a spymaster, and her associate Lang who maintains direct contact with Maati. Meanwhile, Pam Courtney comes to Tambosa looking for her father, an explorer who has vanished; she has been tasked by Mr. X to get her father to help in their efforts to find the Nazis. Two unofficial American agents, adventurer Bob Elliot and his auto mechanic buddy Chuck Kelly, meet Pam on a plane and the three pool their efforts to find and stop the Nazi spies. A wild card in all this is Lothel, the mystery queen of the jungle, who can walk through fire unharmed (as pictured at left), can appear and disappear at will, is invulnerable to bullets, and tries to influence the Tongghili to choose Kyba as the new leader. When that seems to fail, she works with the Allies to find and defeat the Nazis.

This is a 13-chapter serial and most of the above summary is made clear in the first two chapters, which leaves eleven more chapters to fill. On the plus side, this has the look of a relatively high-budget B-film with good sets and some twisty plot points. For the most part, it doesn't keep repeating story bits like many serials do. On the other hand, the writing is not great. Far too much activity is talked about rather than shown, with people constantly announcing who they are, where they are, what they've just done and what they're planning on doing. Each chapter has a cliffhanger but the next chapter begins with exposition, usually expressed in dialogue, often in England or Berlin, before we see how the cliffhanger works itself out. There are plenty of plot holes. For example, we never understand the importance of the Sword of Tongu aside from its being a symbol of power. I kept wondering why the bad guys didn't just construct a fake one, and in fact, long about chapter 12, someone does. Lothel, the title character, is quite strange. In terms of being a great white protector of the Tongghili, she's sort of a Tarzan figure. She seems to live in the back of a cave chamber which is filled with fire and used as a place of justice—accused criminals are sent to the fire chamber and told that the innocent will survive. No one ever does except Lothel; in every chapter, we see a clip of her, dressed in diaphanous robes, leaping through the fire and emerging in the throne room to make important proclamations. Her origin is never even touched on. There are a number of characters, some (like the sinister bar owner Tambosa Tim) only present for a short time. Some of the Nazi henchmen, such as Drake and Weber, are important briefly before they are sacrificed.

The acting is fairly weak. Our hero, Edward Norris (Bob), is OK in the crunch but not quite as heroic looking or acting as he could be, definitely not up to the standards of Kane Richmond or Buster Crabbe. Eddie Quillan (Chuck) is mostly comic relief with an occasionally heroic scene. Lois Collier (Pam) fades into the background. Ruth Roman (known later for Strangers on a Train and lots of TV including Knots Landing) has a nice otherworldly look and demeanor as Lothel, but when it comes down to it, doesn't have much to do except flit about in her fireproof nightgown. Douglass Dumbrille (Lang), Clarence Muse (Kyba), and Napoleon Simpson (Maati) are fine, and the best performance comes from German actress Tala Birell as Bork. Though she gets stuck in her own repetitive bits, she's convincing as the chief villain who also has to appear pleasant and innocent. It's a rarity to have a female as the main Nazi and she's up to the task. I like the fact that some of the Black characters, mostly Maati and Godac, have actual agency and aren't just mindless followers or henchmen. I liked this a little less than I wanted to, but the Blu-ray print has been nicely restored, even if some of the early chapters are a little faded looking in terms of clarity. As a whole, it's awfully talky though rarely boring, and probably not one for a viewer new to classic era serials. Pictured above right are Norris and Quillan. [Blu-ray]

No comments: