The
Psychotronic Zone
By
Ed Garea
Johnny
Sheffield was best known as “Boy” in the Tarzan series. As the
series went on, however, he naturally grew older, and subsequently,
outgrew the part. His last movie in the series was Tarzan and
the Huntress in 1947. A couple of years later, in 1949,
producer Walter Mirisch, taking stock of how well Johnny Weissmuller
was doing after stepping down as Tarzan and starring as Jungle Jim in
producer Sam Katzman’s series of jungle quickies for Columbia,
figured he might be able to do the same at Monogram. Playing on
Weissmuller’s success, Katzman quickly signed Sheffield to a
contract. Now all he needed was vehicle for his new employee. It was
already decided that Sheffield would be a type of younger Tarzan,
playing to the Saturday matinee crowd that proved quite profitable
for Monogram over the years. However, the question was what sort of
vehicle would be right for Sheffield, i.e., make the
most money for the investment?
Mirisch
found his subject material when he acquired the rights to a series of
novels aimed at younger readers: the “Bomba the Jungle Boy”
series. A popular series based on the success of the Tarzan stories,
it was started in 1926 by the Statemeyer Syndicate. Attributed to
“Roy Rockwood,” the novels were actually produced by writers on
the publisher’s staff. They followed the adventures of Bomba
(Swahili for “small package”), a young boy separated from his
parents and raised by an aged naturalist. The first 10 books in the
series take place in South America and were often focused on Bomba’s
search for his true identity. The last 10 books find an older Bomba
enjoying adventures in Africa. The series lasted until 1938. Because
of the blatant racism of the originals (a
common theme of the “Bomba” books is that Bomba, because he is
white, has a soul that is awake, while the dark-skinned natives have
souls that are sleeping), Mirisch decided on another
direction, and except for the first in the series, the rest were
based on original screenplays.
Even
though they were produced in the usual low-budget, shoddy style that
was a Monogram trademark, they proved to be a big hit with Saturday
matinee crowd and, along with the Bowery Boys series, became the
biggest moneymakers for the studio. In fact, the films were so
popular that publishers Grosset and Dunlap reprinted the first 10
“Bomba” books. Clover books, a short-lived outfit in the ‘50s,
reprinted the entire series. According to a November
1947 Hollywood Reporter news item, the series was to
have been filmed in color.
The
Bomba series came to an end in 1955. Mirisch attempted to sell the
series as a television show, but there were no takers. With it also
came the end of Johnny Sheffield’s career; he never made another
film. He died in October 15, 2010, of a heart attack hours after
falling off a ladder while attempting to prune a palm tree.
The
Bomba series may have ended but there was still life in the
franchise. In 1962, independent station WGN in Chicago repackaged the
Bomba films as a prime time summer series called Zim Bomba.
WGN executive Fred Silverman (remember him?) stated that “Zim”
meant “Son of” in Swahili. They proved a local ratings sensation
in a season where their only competition was reruns and baseball
games. In 1967, DC Comics published a series of seven comic books
based on the character.
The
Bomba films reflect their low-budget environs. Besides the ubiquitous
stock footage, taken mainly from Africa Speaks, a
1930 documentary, the films were shot at Malibu and Griffith Park in
Los Angeles, and Bronson Canyon. The scenes where Bomba fights rubber
crocodiles were shot at the Los Angeles County Arboretum and
Botanic Garden, which began life in 1875 as Elias Jackson “Lucky”
Baldwin's Ranch. Indoor scenes were shot at Monogram studios.
Bomba,
The Jungle Boy (Monogram, 1949) – Director: Ford
Beebe. Writers: Jack DeWitt (s/p). Roy Rockwood (books). Cast: Johnny
Sheffield, Peggy Ann Garner, Onslow Stevens, Charles Irwin, Smoki
Whitfield, & Martin Wilkins. B&W, 70 minutes.
George
Harland (Stevens) and his daughter Patricia (Garner) are
photographers hoping to capture the local wildlife on film. Andy
Barnes (Irwin), an old friend whose house they visit, is their guide,
and, along with his assistant Eli (Whitfield), leads them into the
jungle. Garner is the first to meet Bomba. She becomes lost, and her
gun-bearer is killed by a leopard who, in turn, is killed by Bomba.
At first, she’s frightened by Bomba and pulls her pistol on him. He
disarms her and leaves. Alone, she runs after Bomba, who eventually
takes her to his home, a cave overlooking the Great Rift. He explains
that his parents are deceased and an aged naturalist by the name of
Cody Cason (since deceased) raised him.
Pat
would like to stay, but she has to find her father. Unknown to both
of them, Harland is hot on their trail, intending to kill Bomba as a
kidnapper, but his plan goes awry when a plague of locusts descends
upon him and Barnes. By this point in the movie, Patricia has changed
from her former garb into a well-fitting leopard skin, courtesy of
bad screenwriting. Bomba then helps build a raft so the party can
take a shortcut back to Andy’s place via a river crossing. Invited
to come along to America by the Harlands, Bomba demurs, as he’s
unwilling to leave his jungle friends.
Bomba
on Panther Island (Monogram, 1949) – Written
and Directed by Ford Beebe. Cast: Johnny Sheffield, Allene Roberts,
Lita Moran, Charles Irwin, Harry Lewis, Smoki Whitfield, Martin
Wilkins, & Bill Walker. B&W, 70 minutes.
Developer
Robert Maitland (Lewis) brings his sister, Judy (Roberts), with him
to Africa with plans to build a plantation. Commissioner Barnes (now
played by Irwin) and Eli (Whitfield) are back again to lend a hand.
Unfortunately for everyone concerned, though, a rogue panther is on
the loose.
Bomba
is after the panther that killed his pet monkey. He problem is that
the locals believe the animal is sacred and fear it. During his hunt,
he meets Judy Maitland (Roberts) and Losana (Baron), her maid and
traveling companion. Judy’s father, Robert (Lewis), is building a
plantation to provide a living for himself and Judy. Judy hates the
jungle and is forever whining about it while Robert is thick in his
attitude toward the natives and his mission.
Maitland
starts a fire to clear the area, but a sudden windstorm sends the
flames out of control and Bomba takes Judy to a cave for refuge. The
panther is also conveniently there, and after a fierce struggle,
Bomba kills it. When they emerge from the cave, the fire has
miraculously stopped. Maitland blames himself for the fire and says
he will return to Canada, but Judy has become a convert to the
beauties of Africa and encourages her brother to see his project
through. Bomba says goodbye to Judy and melts back into the jungle.
The
Lost Volcano (Monogram, 1950) – Written and
Directed by Ford Beebe. Story by Jack DeWitt. Cast: Johnny Sheffield,
Donald Woods, Marjorie Lord, John Ridgely, Tommy Ivo, Elena Verdugo,
Don C. Harvey, Grandon Rhodes, & Robert Lewis. B&W, 76
minutes.
Bomba
comes across the camp of zoologist Paul Gordon (Woods) and his
family. Gordon catches animals for zoos. Being the animal lover he
is, Bomba frees the animals. The natives tell Gordon that Bomba did
it, but Gordon believes Bomba to be something of an urban myth.
Gordon
discovers that his young son, David (Ivo) is friends with Bomba. He
tells David that the young boy must bring his friend home to meet the
folks. If not, they can no longer play together. Only Nona (Verdugo),
the family maid, believes David, and one day follows the boy into the
jungle, where she sees him bring forth Bomba with a series of bird
calls. David strips down to a loincloth and he and Bomba go for a
swing on the vines.
Dr.
Charles Langley (Rhodes), along with his guides, Fred Higgins
(Harvey) and Fred Barton (Ridgley), call on Paul and his wife, Ruth
(Lord), telling them seismograph records point to the existence of a
large volcano in the area. He wants Paul to help him find it. Paul
declines, telling his guest that he and Ruth feel it’s time to
return to civilization and enroll David in school.
Back
in the jungle, David tells Bomba about what his father said, but
Bomba, who dislikes those that cage animals, refuses the offer, so
they part. Bomba later runs into Nona gives her the loincloth and
knife that David keeps hidden in a tree at their special meeting
place.
Nona
shows the loincloth and knife, which is made of gold and embedded
with emeralds, to the Gordons. David tells his father that Bomba
found the knife in the hills and has taken him to the secret place he
found it, but made David promise not to tell or show anybody where it
is. Langley presses Paul to take him to the volcano, and Barton and
Higgins offer to take David to school in Capetown. Paul agrees, but
that night, as David and Nona leave, Barton and Higgins kidnap them
planning to force David to take them to the volcano. Nona escapes and
runs into Bomba. He sends Nona home to get help while he trails
David.
While
the kidnappers are asleep, Bomba sneaks in and unties David as the
two of them slip off into the night. In the morning, Barton and
Higgins recapture Bomba and tie him up, but a python drops from a
tree and attacks Higgins, allowing Bomba to free himself and escape
with David. While fording the river, a rubber crocodile attacks.
While Bomba is wrestling the rubbery creature, the kidnappers arrive
and grab David.
When
the search party approaches, Barton opens fire, killing Langley and
wounding Paul. Barton and Higgins escape with David, who reluctantly
guides them on foot to the lost volcano. As the larger volcano near
the mountains begins to erupt, Bomba catches up with group on a rocky
ridge and leads them through the lost volcano, which is full of
treasure. Barton slips away to greedily fill his pockets with jewels,
but meets his end when he’s caught in a rockslide. The search party
finally arrives, and Higgins grabs for Paul's gun, but he falls off
the ridge into the path of the molten lava, courtesy of a stock
footage shot of a cavemen being smothered by lava in Hal Roach’s
1940 epic, One Million Years, B.C. With David and his
family reunited, Bomba bids farewell to his new friends and promises
visit soon.
The
volcano footage was obtained from the film files of the National
Geographic and the Encyclopædia Britannica, and
is actually footage of an Italian volcano erupting. The footage would
be used later in Safari Drums.
Bomba
and The Hidden City (Monogram, 1950) –
Director: Ford Beebe. Screenplay: Carroll Young. Cast: Johnny
Sheffield, Sue England, Paul Guilfoyle, Damian O’Flynn, Leon
Belasco, Charles La Torre, Smoki Whitfield, & Franl Lackteen.
B&W, 71 minutes.
While
snapping photos of jungle wildlife near the Hidden City, American
Dennis Johnson (O’Flynn) notices a young man swinging on a vine. He
asks his driver, Hadji (Whitfield), who comments that he has heard
stories about Bomba, a jungle boy who lives in the trees. Johnson
decides to consult the emir, Hassan (Guilfoyle), about the matter.
Hassan
is collecting taxes when Johnson arrives, and explains that he became
emir after invaders killed his successor during a war. While they are
talking, Raschid (Belasco), a poor man from a neighboring village,
interrupts, offering to give Hassan his daughter Zidah (England) so
that she can take the place of a harem girl who recently escaped.
Hassan accepts the offer.
Johnson
asks Hassan for permission to find Bomba. Hassan gives his permission
and offers to help. After Johnson leaves, Hassan takes his aide
Abdullah (La Torre) aside and tells him of his concerns, namely that
Bomba had earlier witnesses Hassan killing the rightful ruler and his
wife. Abdullah tells Hassan not to worry, for Bomba will not be taken
alive.
The
search party locates Bomba and tries to kill him. Wounded, Bomba
escapes to a nearby village, where a woman named Zidah (England)
tends to his wounds. Zidah has been promised by her father as a wife
for Hassan, who has come to the village to take her back with him.
Hassan
takes Zidah back to the Hidden City, which seems inexplicably
familiar to her. Bomba arrives to rescue Zidah, but is taken prisoner
by Hassan. Johnson and a party rescues Bomba, who tells them he saw
Hassan shoot a man and woman, whom he identifies from a photograph on
the storeroom floor. Johnson recognizes them as the former emir and
his wife, and Zidah realizes they were her parents, and Hassan wanted
to take her back to the Hidden City to kill her.
With
Hassan and his men now in hot pursuit, Johnson and the others flee to
the jungle, where Hassan conveniently falls into the lake to become
crocodile lunch. As they prepare to depart for the coast, Johnson and
Hadji tell the grateful citizens of the Hidden City that Zidah will
be their temporary ruler. Promising to come back to visit her, Bomba
returns to his home in the jungle.
Although
the character played by Sue England is referred to as "Leah"
in the reviews, she is called "Zidah" in the film.
The
Lion Hunters (Monogram, 1951) – Written and
Directed by Ford Beebe. Cast: Johnny Sheffield, Morris Ankrum, Ann E.
Todd, Douglas Kennedy, Smoki Whitfield, Davis Roberts & Woody
Strode. B&W, 75 minutes.
As
the movie opens, Bomba sneaks into hunter Martin’s (Kennedy) camp
at night and frees four lions trapped there. The next morning, native
guide Jonas (Whitfield) discovers Bomba's tracks and shares this
information with lion trapper Forbes (Ankrum) and his daughter Jean
(Todd), who are on their way to meet Martin.
Soon
afterward, Bomba comes upon Jean in the jungle and explains that he
found a wounded lion cruelly left to die. Jean tells him the lions
are being sent to zoos for educational purposes, but Bomba, friend to
all animals in the jungle, tells her that the animals should not be
removed from their homes. After hearing this, Jean promises to tell
her father about Bomba's reservations.
The
next day, Forbes and Jean arrive at the encampment to find Martin has
caged over a dozen lions. Martin is fit to be tied when he hears the
other lions have been freed, but refuses to believe the Bomba legend.
When Forbes suggests to him they find other happy hunting grounds and
avoid this mess, Martin turns him down flat.
Finding
Jean alone, Bomba leads her to the cubs of the murdered lion where
Jean is touched by the vulnerable babies. She confronts her father
and Martin about their lion hunting, but they ignore her. Bomba heads
for the camp to free the lions. Martin takes aim, but Jean pushes
Martin's gun, spoiling his aim. Martin's men refuse to go after
Bomba, and Jonas suggests that Martin approach the nearby Massai
Tribe, who keep lions for protection against other tribes.
On
their way to speak with the Massai, Forbes, Jean and Martin spot Lohu
(Roberts), son of a Massai chief, hunting a lion. When the lion
attacks the boy, Martin takes several shots, killing not only the
lion, but also the boy. In a ruse to secure the Massai’s help,
Martin takes the boy's body to the chief, claiming the lion killed
his son. The chief agrees to help, but after Martin leaves, it’s
discovered that bullets that killed the boy. When the chief orders
his men to kill one of the white people in Martin's group for
revenge, Bomba offers instead to disarm the white men and drive them
out of the area in two days.
Jean
discovers that Martin has set up a fatal trap for Bomba and races
into the jungle to warn him. Bomba calls to birds and monkeys, who
tell the lions to leave the area. Within minutes, dozens of lions
flee the jungle. Fearing the lions might attack Jean, Bomba escorts
her back to the encampment, where Martin shoots at him. Bomba jumps
into the river to escape with Martin following in a boat. When a
crocodile attacks Martin, Bomba kills the animal in a fierce knife
battle.
Despite
Bomba having saved his life, Martin is going to to continue trapping.
Holding Martin at spear point, Bomba cages him in a lion trap and
calls to his animal friends: chimpanzees, baboons, hyenas, leopards,
monkeys and birds to mock Martin. Jean soon finds Martin and laughs
at Bomba's joke.
Meanwhile,
the Massai chief sends his warriors to drive the lions into Martin's
encampment. Early the next morning, Jean and Bomba in the jungle hear
the Massai warrior drums driving the lions toward the camp. Bomba
rushes to save the men, but Martin, Jonas and Forbes have locked
themselves in a hut for protection. A lion breaks into the hut and
kills Martin. Bomba kills him with a knife, saving Forbes and Jonas,
and when the Massai warriors arrive at the village, Bomba sends them
back to their chief and promises that the white man will be gone in
two days. Soon after, as agreed, Forbes, Jonas and Jean leave by boat
to return home. Bomba waves goodbye and melts back into the jungle.
The
Lion Hunters was Woody Strode’s first screen credit and
like other black actors, he found himself in the standard role: that
of “African native.” With his career slow to take off,
Strode returned to the Bomba series a year later, working an
uncredited role in African Treasure (1952). It would
be several years before he broke through to decent roles in top
productions.
Ann
E. Todd, who played Jean, added the “E” to her name so as not to
be confused with the British actress of the same name best known for
Hitchcock's The Paradine Case (1947) and opposite
James Mason in The Seventh Veil (1945). Ann E. Todd
was a child star who made her debut at seven years old as “Toto”
in George Cukor's Zaza (1938). She also appeared as
Berthe in All This, and Heaven Too with Bette Davis
(1940). She played Ceinwen in John Ford's How Green Was My
Valley (1941) and the young Ann Sheridan in Kings
Row (1942). The Lion Hunters was her last
film. She appeared for a few years in the TV sitcom The Stu
Erwin Show (1950-1954) before leaving show business and
returning to school, where she earned a master's degree in music
history. After trying her hand at teaching, Todd went on to serve as
the music librarian at the University of California at Berkeley for
21 years. In 1984, she founded a music publishing company, Fallen
Leaf Press, which operated until her retirement in 2000.
Elephant
Stampede (Monogram, 1951) – Written and
Directed by Ford Beebe. Cast: Johnny Sheffield, Donna Martell, John
Kellogg, Myron Healey, Edith Evanson, Leonard Mudie, Martin Wilkins,
Guy Kingsford. B&W, 71 minutes.
Elephant
poachers Bob Warren (Kellogg) and Joe Collins (Healey) kill game
warden Mark Phillips (Kingsford) when he catches Collins shooting an
elephant. They hide the body and take Phillips’s papers so Warren
can pose as Mark and use the credentials to continue to hunt ivory.
In
a nearby village, schoolteacher Miss Banks (Evanson) instructs the
villagers in English while her young assistant Lola (Martell) teaches
Bomba how to read on the outskirts of the village. Lola wants
romance, but Bomba’s more interested in learning, especially in
spelling "elephant," his favorite animal and friend in the
jungle. Miss Banks tells deputy commissioner Andy Barnes that she
knew Phillips, and the man passing himself off as Phillips is an
imposter.
Barnes
then decides he must return to the station to telegraph the
commissioner, and tells Bomba to keep an eye on the suspicious duo.
When Bomba discovers what Collins and Warren are doing, he calls to
the elephants and leads them out of the area, away from the hunters'
range. The hunters then see Bomba, who has just discovered Phillips’s
body, and decide they must get rid of him before they can continue.
In
the village, Banks tells tribal chief Nagalia that she is being
transferred, but the chief believing that education is the only way
to help his people, offers to sell hidden ivory, procured before the
law forbidding ivory hunting, to generate a salary for her and buy
valuable goods for his people.
Collins
and Warren find Bomba and Lola by the lake and shoot, wounding Lola,
but Bomba's elephants run Warren into the lake and Collins up a tree.
The poachers decide to get out while the getting’s good and return
to the village to collect their things. Nagalia tells Warren about
the ivory, and the poacher, who wants the ivory for himself, offers
to help transport it with his jeep. When Collins hears about the
ivory, he figures a double cross and chases after Warren on foot.
Nagala
admits to Bomba that he told Warren about the ivory. Bomba leaves for
the cave and finds the villagers carrying the tusks back to the
village. He advises them to hide the ivory in the lake while
confronting the poachers. The poachers capture Bomba, Nagalia, Banks,
and Lola interrogating them at gunpoint back in the village. Collins
wants to leave, but Warren kills him. Just before he can kill the
others, the elephants stampede and kill Warren. Andy arrives soon
after and, with Nagalia, supervises the villagers in pulling the
ivory from the lake. Andy comments on "the curse of the native
tribes of Africa," and Banks adds that it "will be the
means for helping these people to a better way of life." Lola
looks longingly at chimps kissing in the trees, hoping that Bomba
will return to say goodbye, but Bomba is watching nearby as his
friends leave the jungle.
There’s
more Bomba to come in Part Two.
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