I
can anticipate the first question: Why write about lion movies, that
is, movies featuring lions? I can only answer that it all goes back
to childhood. Animals always fascinated me; as a child I was
surrounded by the stuffed representations relatives gave me as crib
and later bedmates. However, as I grew older, it was the big cats
that caught my attention. And of the big cats, the most majestic is
the lion. I was always glued to the television set whenever a
wildlife show was on, and when the show featured lions, I was happier
than a pig in mud.
There
is something indefinably regal about the lion, and I’m not alone in
that opinion. The philosopher Nietzsche was also fascinated with the
lion, referring to it as the “blond beast” in his writings. (Many
readers thought he was referring to Aryans, but it was indeed the
lion, an animal Nietzsche revered for its strength.) Frankly, ever
since I learned as a teenager that, according to the horoscope, I was
a born under the sign of Leo (and at the time, I liked what I read
about the sign as the characteristics all applied to me), I
have been collecting all things leonine. I have figurines in every
medium from lead crystal to bubblegum, calendars, clothing, wall
hangings, computer icons and sound effects, sun catchers and
tableware, even a Pez dispenser, all of them representations of
lions. When I visited Las Vegas, I stayed at the MGM Grand and was
privileged to see Cowboy – perhaps the great great grandson (maybe
another great is needed) of Leo the famous MGM lion who roared at the
beginning of every film.
I’ve
always made it a point to see any movie including or featuring lions,
and was surprised that Kitty-cat did not have a cameo in the most
recent Addams Family movie. When it was suggested that I compile a
list of lion movies, I pounced on the opportunity, so presented here
are my top 10 movies about or featuring lions. It was impossible to
rank them from one to 10 because they are all great to me (especially
the two that are actually trilogies).
Born
Free (Columbia, 1966): A
true story adaptation of the book by Joy Adamson about Elsa the
lioness, an orphaned female cub raised to maturity by Adamson, but
who must be trained to return to the wild. This one is a
two-handkerchief movie that had me singing its theme song long after
it left the theaters. I considered making it my personal theme song
for a while, and Andy Williams performed it beautifully. The film is
well made and follows the book (which I read later) pretty closely.
Virginia McKenna and Bill Travers are excellent as Joy and George
Adamson.
The
Chronicles of Narnia (Buena
Vista, 2005-2010): The Lion, the
Witch and the Wardrobe (2005), Prince
Caspian (2008), and The
Voyage of the Dawn Treader
(2010): A wonderful adaptation of author C. S. Lewis’ series of
fantasy novels set in the fictional realm of Narnia. Four siblings
play hide-and-seek in a big house when the youngest, Lucy (Georgie
Henley) hides in a wardrobe closet that opens onto the parallel
universe of Narnia where the White Witch (Tilda Swinton) rules and
has made winter the only season. She convinces her brothers Peter
(William Moseley) and Edmund (Skandar Keynes) and her sister Susan
(Anna Popplewell) to join her in Narnia where they have adventures
with talking animals, meet the enormous lion Aslan (who brings back
the Spring to Narnia with the melodious baritone voice of Liam
Neeson) and eventually become ruling kings and queens.
My
favorite quote from The Voyage
of the Dawn Treader spoken to
Lucy by Aslan: “Things never happen the same way twice, dear
one.”
The
Ghost and the Darkness (Paramount,
1996): The notorious “Man-eaters of Tsavo” have been the subject
of quite a few movies. This movie is a remake of Bwana
Devil (U.A., 1952), the first
American movie to be photographed in 3-D and color. It starred Robert
Stack as Bob Heyward, the chief engineer on the East African railway
project, who must go after the lions that have been killing off his
workers.
The
Ghost and the Darkness follows the
same plot: A railway line is being constructed by the British to
facilitate transport of goods between their African colonies but a
pair of mane-less male lions team up against them. No matter what was
done, or who was hired to rid the workers of this seemly supernatural
pair, the lions evaded capture with an eerie intelligence. I
found myself cheering for the lions. Before they were shot, they had
killed 35 people over a nine-month period. When I saw them posed
in the Field Museum in Chicago several years later, I learned that
their mane-less condition was due to the thorny bush countryside in
which they successfully camouflaged themselves. It had the net effect
of literally tearing out their manes. This is the reason several
people have mistaken them for females. Michael Douglas plays Charles
Remington, the hunter hired by bridge engineer, Colonel John Henry
Patterson (Val Kilmer), who finally thwarts their uncanny attacks.
The
Last Lions (National
Geographic, 2011): A heart-rending documentary from the
husband-and-wife team of Dereck and Beverly Joubert about a female
lion and her cubs as she tries to keep them fed and safe from the
many dangers in the African veldt, the most dangerous being that of
poachers, who have depleted the lion population from half-a-million
50 years ago to only 20,000 today. Jeremy Irons narrates. The
Jouberts emphasize the threat of poachers in decimating the number of
lions while noting the lion’s pride of place on the list for
eco-tourists, an industry that brings in $200 billion worldwide. The
Jouberts also make a strong case for both our moral duty to protect
lions (as well as other big cats like leopards, tigers, cheetahs, and
pumas) and the economic benefit such protection would make. It is a
difficult film to watch, especially for such an animal lover as
myself. I have no idea how long it took to film this movie but
several of the scenes were difficult to watch because they depict in
graphic detail how brutal nature can be to the vulnerable cubs. One
scene in particular shows the lioness abandoning a cub whose both
rear legs were broken in a wildebeest stampede, but who calls
pitifully to her while dragging itself forward.
Secondhand
Lions (New
Line, 2003): A comedy about a great way to spend a summer vacation!
Haley Joel Osment plays Walter, a young boy whose mother Mae (Kyra
Sedgwick) sends him off to the country to be cared for by his two
eccentric uncles Garth (Michael Caine) and Hub (Robert Duvall). The
irresponsible gesture turns out to be a positive influence on his
development into manhood as he befriends a full-grown male lion
living in the cornfield. Needless to say he isn’t shy at the end of
the movie. Don’t ask why the lion is there. It’s just fun.
Madagascar
1, 2, & 3 (Dreamworks,
2005-2012): This animated series features the adventures of Alex the
lion, Melman the giraffe, Marty the zebra and Gloria the hippo
(respectively voiced by Ben Stiller, David Schwimmer, Chris Rock, and
Jada Pickett Smith), who are convinced by a quartet of scheming
penguins to leave the safe confines of the New York metropolitan zoo
to return to Africa, but are accidentally re-routed to Madagascar
instead. In the second installation they all leave Madagascar and
finally make it to Africa where a different set of adventures await.
In the third movie the bored penguins decide to leave Africa for
Europe and the four main characters chase after them to keep them out
of mischief. All wind up in a traveling circus whose final
destination is New York.
The
Lion King (Buena Vista,
1994): This heralded animated feature concerns Simba, a cub born to
reigning Lion King Mufasa (voiced by James Earl Jones), and who by
birthright is destined to be the next Lion King. But Mufasa’s
brother Scar (Jeremy Irons) conspires with hyenas to cause Mufasa’s
death and convinces Simba (Jonathan Taylor Thomas) that he was to
blame for his father’s death. Simba goes into exile on his uncle’s
advice while Scar takes over the pride. In exile Simba (Matthew
Broderick – adult voice) meets Timon (Nathan Lane), a meerkat and
his pal Pumbah (Ernie Sabella), a warthog, and lives the good life up
to maturity until his childhood playmate Nala (now also mature and
voiced by Moira Kelly) discovers him in the jungle. Love blossoms,
and she tries to convince him to come back to Pride Rock and face
Scar. But not until a celestial visitation from Mufasa does Simba
return to vanquish the usurper. Throughout, the characters Rafiki
(Robert Guillaume), a wise, old mandrill and adviser to Lion Kings,
and Zazu (Rowan Atkinson), the harried avian care-taker and teacher
of cubs, keep the film light with their comic antics.
I
knew from the trailers that this movie would be, as Ed Sullivan would
say, “Really big!” and would seriously augment my collection with
leonine mementos, which it did. I saw the movie when it opened in
Radio City Music Hall and the Broadway show in the New Amsterdam
Theater while it was in previews in 1997. This resulted in two
T-shirts, two baseball caps, several small figurines, a Mache
sculpture and a Swarovski crystal Simba. I even went to see an
exhibit of Julie Taymor’s costume designs at the World Financial
Center before the Broadway show opened.
The
Wild (Walt Disney Pictures,
2006): A young lion named Ryan (voiced by Greg Cipes) admires and
idolizes his dad, Samson (Kiefer Sutherland) in a city zoo as he
tells the tales of his exploits in “The Wild.” Ryan is
accidentally shipped back to the wild and his dad, along with
Bridget, a giraffe (Janeane Garofalo), Benny, a squirrel (James
Belushi), Nigel, a koala (Eddie Izzard), and Larry, a snake (Richard
Kind) have to go after him and bring him back. The Kicker – dad was
born in captivity and knows nothing of being the King of the Jungle.
They are taken captive by a herd of wildebeest led by the evil Kazar
(William Shatner) who has decided not to be the prey anymore.
Both Samson and Ryan have to become the lions they really are to
escape before the volcano blows.
African
Cats (Disneynature, 2011):
A docudrama featuring two stories – the parallel “growing up in
Africa” stories of Leyla, the alpha lioness, and her single cub
Mara in a pride of lions, and Sita, the cheetah (corny) with five
cubs and their trials and tribulations while trying to wean their
progeny. Leyla’s pride has six lionesses and one male “Fang”
(he has one broken tooth and looks like a loser from the beginning,
but he challenges a crocodile and wins). Across the river is
Kali, an incredibly fit black-maned lion and his four sons “in
their prime” (no females – can you guess where this is going?).
The story shifts back and forth from Sita’s little family fending
off hyenas (once unsuccessfully) and finding food, to Leyla’s
injuries when kicked by a zebra and her exile from the pride when
Kali and his boys take over. It’s an African tennis match,
excellent photography throughout, including the expected Disney happy
ending.
Samuel
L. Jackson’s narration proves better than Jeremy Irons’ in The
Last Lions, but he’s over-the-top dramatic and contributes
several times to making a scene predictable.
The
Wizard of Oz (MGM, 1939):
This movie made it into my top 10 because I could see it over and
over again and still enjoy it. It’s not a “lion” movie per se,
but the allegorical “Cowardly Lion” so beautifully played by Burt
Lahr. Later, in 1975, the role was re-created in the Broadway
Show The Wiz by
Ted Ross. I admit, the concept of a lion being cowardly is
distasteful but the story is a fantasy after all. When I read the
book I learned of all the liberties Hollywood took with the story
(ruby slippers showed up better on screen than silver slippers –
corrected in The Wiz,
and Glinda is introduced as the Good Witch of the North, not the
South – also corrected in The
Wiz) as well as the courageous
deeds performed by the lion that were not included in the movie. One
such instance was on the yellow brick road. In the book, the road was
not always continuous and had increasingly serious gaps. At one
point no one but the lion was able to jump the gap and he carried the
others as he leapt across. Later, the gap was too large even for him
and the Tin Woodman had to cut down a tree for them to cross. But I
guess the movie would have been five hours long if all the
side-stories were included.
With
every Top 10 list there can also be additional movies that one might
consider as runners-up. This one is no exception. In an inclusive
list of “Lion Movies” these cannot be ignored. They vary in
degrees of, shall we say, dignity? But with the invaluable help of my
editors, I let you be the judges of their merit.
Clarence,
the Cross-eyed Lion (MGM,
1965): I was 15 when I saw this comedy in the theater, but I remember
it fondly. A lion unable to hunt because of its double vision is
mistakenly accused of going after villagers but he is only scavenging
food where he can. Dr. Marsh Tracy (Marshall Thompson) a veterinarian
takes him to his study center and his daughter Paula (Cheryl Miller)
adopts him. Together they foil a black market operation on transport
of gorillas.
Later,
the actually strabismic lion co-starred in the television
show Daktari (1966-1969),
a spin-off of the movie that starred Thompson and Miller in the same
roles. Clarence provided many light moments to the serious business
of saving animal life in Africa. The series got its title using the
popularity of a John Wayne’s 1962 safari movie for
Paramount, Hatari!.
The
African Lion (Buena Vista,
1955): This documentary from Disney and narrated by Winston Hibler
follows the three-year filming project of Alfred and Emma Milotte in
Africa. Though lions figure in the movie, the bulk of the film
encompasses the territory they “rule.” As with most Disney films,
the narration at times tends to be too “cute” and the music tends
to be overstated.
Zebra
in the Kitchen (MGM, 1965):
Feeling sympathy for the poor caged animals in the zoo, a young boy
(Jay North) sets them free. Unfortunately the town isn’t too happy
with wild animals turning up all over town. I can see why Jay
got the part of Dennis the Manace. Directed by Ivan Tors and starring
Martin Milner, Andy Devine, and Joyce Meadows. Not really a
“lion” movie as such, but there is a lion in it.
Napoleon
and Samantha (Buena Vista,
1972): Major, a former circus lion, cared for by a clown who moves to
Europe is taken as a pet by two children (the title couple), and when
Napoleon’s grandfather dies they refuse to let Major go. Instead
they take him on a journey to a hermit friend of theirs and
experience dangerous adventures along the way.
Hercules (Paramount,
2014): The latest attempt at filming a mythological hero features
Dwayne Johnson in the title role. Though the hair looks good on him,
the story is rather thin and vacillates between myth and reality. Of
the Twelve Labors, only four are featured including the first, the
killing of the Nemean Lion, which for five seconds was a great
special effect. After that, Hercules must have washed the skin in hot
water because it shrank severely (including the head), otherwise he
never could have worn it.
The
Lion (20th Century
Fox, 1962): Here’s an interesting situation. Ex-wife Christine
(Capucine) summons Robert Hayden (William Holden), a lawyer, all the
way from America to East Africa to help raise their 11-year-old
daughter, Tina (Pamela Franklin), whose best friend is a full-grown
male lion named King that she’s had since it was cub. But what
about hubby number two, John Bullitt (interesting name), played by
Trevor Howard, who manages the game reserve they live on? We can
easily imagine, especially as the love between the two ex’s
rekindles.
Before
Hayden arrived they were getting along well with the local tribe. But
he saves the life of a dying chief left for dead by his people. A
huge faux pas! The chief’s son, Oriunga (Paul Odour)
has his ambition of taking over the chiefdom and marrying Tina dashed
by the resurrection of his dad. Now he has to kill a lion to be chief
and his sights turn to Tina’s pet. It doesn’t go well for him as
Tina sics the big cat on him. Oriunga is fatally mauled, Bullitt
kills the lion, and Tina turns from him to Robert as her father. With
one bullet, Bullitt loses a wife and daughter as they both return to
America with Robert. Hmm. Sounds like a moral. Don’t get divorced,
and if you do, don’t move to Africa. That is unless you have Jack
Cardiff as a director. Then all your scenery will be stunning.
Fluffy (Universal,
1965): Scientist Daniel Potter (Tony Randall) wants to prove that a
wild animal can become a pet with the right training. (Okay…) His
choice is Fluffy, an adult male lion. Look out suburbia! After
realizing that he’s creating a mass panic with his neighbors he and
Fluffy hole up in a hotel, where they meet the owner’s daughter
(Shirley Jones). She’s the only one who is not intimidated by
Fluffy. In fact, quite the opposite, she loves the two of them. But
the fun really starts when circumstantial evidence gets Fluffy
accused of man-eating and the three now find themselves on the run
from the police. Not a laugh riot but a cute idea typical of the
Sixties.
Pride (BBC
TV movie, 2004): As I was watching this movie I was thinking, “How
long did it take to make this film? Lions do not pose for you and act
out a complete story.” It’s the story of a lioness cub named Suki
(voiced by Kate Winslet) who leaves her pride to mate with a male
across the river. She learns a lot about pride living there and
eventually returns to her home pride to defend it against
interlopers. Yes, they’re all real lions, but they’re speaking
with the voices of Helen Mirren (Macheeba), Rupert Graves (Linus),
Sean Bean (Dark), Martin Freeman (Fleck), Robbie Coltrane (James),
Jim Broadbent (Eddie), and John Hurt (Harry). Matching the voices to
the computer graphics allowing the lions to look like they’re
talking is remarkable. That and the dangerously close photography
kept the film from verging on silly.
Fearless Fagan (MGM, 1952): Based on the true story published in Life magazine in 1951 of Private Floyd C. Humeston, this story of a circus clown named Floyd Hilston (Carleton Carpenter) who raised a lion named Fagan from cub to gentle adulthood is endearing. Rather than leave his lifelong friend to a cruel lion tamer, he brings the animal with him when he’s drafted into the Army. At Fort Ord, he hides Fagan in the woods and sneaks off each day to be with him and play his favorite song, “The Loveliest Night of The Year” on the phonograph. At night, Fagan stays in Hilston’s van. His attempt to request time to find Fagan a home is dismissed as bunk by his sergeant.
When
singer Abby Ames (Janet Leigh) arrives to entertain the base she has
an opportunity to meet both Floyd and Fagan but her fear of Fagan
makes her break her promise to Floyd and she tells Colonel Horne
(Wilton Graff) and eventually, Floyd is arrested. The sergeant backs
Floyd and is assigned the job of finding Fagan a home, but to no
avail. Abby starts to like Floyd and, through her suggestion of
publicity, the story makes front-page headlines and a nearby farm
family agrees to take Fagan in. But when Fagan escapes and terrorizes
the WACS in their base, they change their tune and Fagan is remanded
to the lion tamer.
It’s
not hard to guess what comes next. Fagan is mistreated and attacks
the trainer but is injured and runs off. Only with difficulty do
Floyd and Abby get him back to his cage. Floyd is hospitalized in the
process and Abby takes Fagan back to Hollywood. Upon recovery,
Hilston’s sergeant (Keenan Wynn) approves a leave of absence for
Floyd to visit Abby and Fagan. He nearly has a heart attack when he
sees a lion-skin rug on the floor but his fears are allayed when he
goes out back and sees Fagan splashing in Abby’s pool.
The
Sin of Harold Diddlebock (U.A.,
1947): In his last appearance in a film, Harold Lloyd plays a kind of
precursor to the Nutty Professor
movies except he’s not a professor, just a mild-mannered laid-off
bookkeeper with very little to live on. The “Diddlebock” is
a cocktail that releases him from his inhibitions, and with his
newfound courage, he buys a bankrupt circus. This comes with Jackie,
the lion whom he brings when he tries to sell the circus to a banker.
There is a particularly funny scene on the ledge of a skyscraper with
Harold and his friend “Wormy” (Jimmy Conlin) and the lion.
Lions
have shown up as a surprise element in many comedies. Just the
presence of a huge male behind a closed door, calmly descending a
staircase, or sitting quietly behind unsuspecting people can
evoke a giggle. Then, when the lion belts out a roar and everyone
scatters in fear the laughs really begin.
In The
Circus (U.A.,
1928), Charlie Chaplin escapes a horse by running into a lion’s
cage at the circus. Fortunately the lion is sleeping, but Charlie
manages to lock himself in. When he finds a small sliding door he
thinks he’s free but it leads to the tiger’s cage (not sleeping)
right next door.
Hold
That Lion (Columbia, 1947)
features the Three Stooges – Moe, Larry and Shemp – on the run to
escape a train conductor because they haven’t the money to purchase
tickets. They hide in a crate, which is also housing a lion. Of
course, they discover the lion, and, in their panic to get away, they
let it loose on the train.
And
of course, though not released with the original film, there is the
scene where the Marx Brothers take the place of the snarling Leo in
the MGM opening logo for A Night at The
Opera.
If
you enjoy the sheer beauty and power of lions, the way they move and
sound, no matter how silly the story is, you can see why they can
steal the scene. I was surprised at how many I found in movies and
still I can’t help but feel I missed some. No doubt if you look
you’ll find many more lion appearances in films not mentioned here,
depending on how back in time you go. I seem to remember a lion in an
episode of The Little Rascals, but it was only Jack Roach in a lion
suit (Buried
Treasure,
1926).
No comments:
Post a Comment