The film is the 1942 “Tarzan’s New York Adventure” and the scene is about 6 
minutes in.

I’ve uploaded a clip of the scene to You Tube, you can find it at 
https://youtu.be/G-Of5dyGq38

-- 
Barry



> On 18 Jul 2015, at 23:29, sasch stephens <sasch...@hotmail.com> wrote:
> 
> Thanks Michael, you've inspired me to start reviewing Tarzan movies, I see 
> that it is a daunting task, there are a lot of them and go back into the 
> 1930s.  It will be a stroke of luck to find the right one.
> But for a sundial guy, it's such a special clip.    Sasch
> 
> Date: Sat, 18 Jul 2015 12:28:42 -0400
> Subject: Re: Tarzan's sundial
> From: email9648...@gmail.com
> To: sasch...@hotmail.com
> CC: sundial@uni-koeln.de
> 
> 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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