Sasch:

The International Movie Data-Base (IMDb) lists 10 Tarzan movies for the
'50s.

But Johnny Weismuller isn't in any of them. It's Lex Baxter (or Barker?)
until Gordon Baxter took over in 1955.

Here's the list:

1950: Tarzan & the Slave Girl (Lex Baxter)
1951: Tarzan's Peril (Lex Baxter)
1952: Tarzan's Savage Fury (Lex Baxter)
1953: Tarzan & the She-Devil (Lex Baxter)
1955: Tarzan's Hidden Jungle (Gordon Scott)
1957: Tarzan & the Lost Safari (Gordon Scott)
1958: Tarzan & the Trappers (Gordon Scott)
1958: Tarzan's Fight for Life (Gordon Scott)
1959: Tarzan's Greatest Adventure (Gordon Scott)
1959: Tarzan the Ape Man (Gordon Scott)

Look at the synopses of those movies. Maybe one of them will have something
familiar from the movie of interest.

When you find the right one, or some possibilities for the right one, check
to find out if it's on YouTube.

Michael Ossipoff




On Sat, Jul 18, 2015 at 12:16 AM, sasch stephens <sasch...@hotmail.com>
wrote:

> There is a Tarzan movie, maybe with Johnnie Weissmiller from the 1950's
> which might have been
> the inspiration for the Terror Creatures film.  I've been hoping to find
> the clip for 30 years to be used as part of a sundial exhibition. It's too
> good!
>
> The scene in question finds Tarzan in the jungle with two obviously
> sinister characters near their twin prop plane.  Tarzan is telling them
> that they are not welcome there and takes two sticks, one small and one
> large and vigorously sticks them in the ground and says, "When the shadow
> of the tall stick passes the small stick, you must be gone".  It fits in so
> well with the primal forces of the jungle.
>
> I've been in search of this clip for years, anyone know how to find it?
> Sasch Stephens
>
>
>
> ------------------------------
> Date: Fri, 17 Jul 2015 08:47:05 -0400
> Subject: Another movie with a sundial
> From: email9648...@gmail.com
> To: sundial@uni-koeln.de
>
> Another movie with a sundial:
>
>
> A 1965 English-subtitled foreign movie called *Terror Creatures from the*
> *Grave* had a character describing and showing a sundial.
>
>
> It was an azimuth dial, admittedly not an old or fancy one. It didn’t read
> in hours. It just marked one solar azimuth.
>
>
> In fact, it consisted of two sticks, vertically sticking in the ground. A
> long stick and a short one.
>
>
> Two characters were walking along the shore, and the woman called the
> man’s attention to something on the ground. He said, “What is it?”. She
> said it was a sundial that her father used to use to find out when the fish
> were biting. When the long stick’s shadow pointed toward the short stick,
> he would take his boat into the reeds.
>
>
> Of course one would expect fish to respond more to solar *altitude* than
> to azimuth.
>
>
> But there could have been a tree, or a vertical cliff-edge or building,
> that began or ceased to shade the fishing-spot at a certain solar azimuth.
>
>
> Michael Ossipoff
>
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> https://lists.uni-koeln.de/mailman/listinfo/sundial
>
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