Cast (In Credits Order)

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Cast (In Credits Order) Cast (in credits order) Typed by a disney fan with the username of Disneyphile on the Disneysites.com Message Board Disney Song: Put your faith in what you most believe in Feature Two worlds, one family Films: Trust your heart, let fate decide To guide these lives we see Tarzan A paradise untouched by man Awards Within this world, blessed with love A simple life, they live in peace Cast Softly tread the sand below your feet now Contents Two worlds one family Trust your heart, let fate decide To guide these lives we see Film Info Beneath the shelter of the trees Images Only love can enter here A simple life, they live in peace Income Raise your head up, lift high the load Info Take strength from those that need you Build high the walls, build strong the beams A new life is waiting, but danger's no stranger here Mistakes No words describe a mother's tears Songlyrics No words can heal a broken heart A dream is gone, but where there's hope... Trivia Somewhere, something is calling for you Two worlds, one family Trust your heart, let fate decide To guide these lives we see [...] Every moment now, the bond grows stronger Two worlds, one family Trust your heart, let fate decide To guide these lives we see Terk: Mama, look! Look over there! Various gorillas: Kala! She's back! etc. Gorilla: Are you all right? Kala: I'm fine, no, really, honestly, it's just that I got a little...sidetracked. Gorilla: Well, isn't that, um, well it's so... Second gorilla: Well, it's just so, so... Terk: Yeah, it's freaky-looking, okay that's what it is. Gorilla: Terkina! Terk: Well it is! I mean, what the heck is it, anyway? Kala: He's a baby. Terk: Whoa! Ow! I can't--So where's his mama? Kala: Well, I'm going to be his mother now. Terk: You know he's not so bad once you get used to him. Kala's gonna be it's mother now. HTTP://COPIONI.CORRIERESPETTACOLO.IT Kala: Kerchak, I saved him from Sabor. Kerchak: Kala, it won't replace the one we lost. Kala: I know that, but he needs me. Kerchak: But it, it--Kala, look at it! It's not our kind. No, you have to take it back. Kala: Take him back? But he'll die! Kerchak: If the jungle wants him, then-- Kala: I want him! Kerchak: Kala, I cannot let you put our family in danger. Kala: Does he look dangerous to you? Kerchak: Was it alone? Kala: Yes. Sabor killed his family. Kerchak: Are you sure? Kala: Yes. There are no others. Kerchak: Then you may keep him. Kala: Kerchak, I know he'll be a good son. Kerchak: I said he could stay. That doesn't make him my son. We will nest here for the night. Terk: So um, whatcha gonna call it? Kala: I'm going to call HIM Tarzan. Terk: Tarzan? Okay, he's your baby. Gorilla: All right little lady, come on, it's way past your nest time. Terk: Aw, mom! Gorilla: No. Terk: Five more minutes? Gorilla: No. Terk: Two more minutes? Gorilla: No. Terk: One more minutes? Kala: Oh, oh no, shh, shh, don't cry, come on, come on, I'm here. [singing] Come stop your crying, it'll be all right, come take my hand, hold it tight, I will protect you from all around you, I will be here, don't you cry Song: For one so small, you seem so strong My arms will hold you, keep you safe and warm This bond between us can't be broken I will be here, don't you cry 'Cause you'll be in my heart Yes, you'll be in my heart From this day on, now and forevermore You'll be in my heart No matter what they say You'll be here in my heart, always Kala: Always Kala: Tarzan? Tarzan? Tarzan: I sure scared you, mom! Kala: You sure did! Can't you imitate any quieter animals? Tarzan: Aw mom, that's no fun. Wanna see me be a leopard? Kala: Why don't you just come up with your own sound? Gorillas: Kala! Tarzan: Oops. Terk: Tarzan, thank goodness you're all right! Kala and I have been so worried. Thank you, thank you for finding him, Kerchak, you are such a wise and caring leader. (Run!) Tarzan: Um... Terk: Hello! Are you thick in the head? Tarzan: What? Terk: How many times do I have to tell ya? If you want Kerchak to like you, stay away from him. Gorillas: Hey, come on Terk, step on it! Last one there's a dung beetle. Terk: Yeah, and the first one's gotta eat it. HTTP://COPIONI.CORRIERESPETTACOLO.IT Tarzan: Terk, can I come? Terk: Well, yeah you could if you could keep up, but you know, you can't really keep up. Wait up guys, wait up, right behind you. Gorillas: Take that! Stop hitting yourself! Stop hitting yourself! etc. Terk: The fun has arrived. Thank you very much. Gorilla: Hey, what took you so long? Terk: I had a little pest-control problem but it's all taken care of. Whoa! Tarzan: Hi guys. Gorillas: Terk, what is this, some kind of joke? Tell me I'm not looking at the hairless wonder. Tarzan: Well, Terk said I could come along if I could keep up. Gorillas: Oh no, Terk! Terk: I'll handle this guys, okay? Listen, buddy, c'mere. We got a tiny little itsy-bitsy problem here, okay? Personally, I'd love to hang out with you. You know I would. But the guys, they need a little convincing. Tarzan: Okay, what do I gotta do? Terk: Do? What do you gotta do? Oh, it's so stupid. Tarzan: What? Terk: Well, you gotta, you gotta go get a hair. Tarzan: A hair? Terk: Yeah, a hair, uh-huh. An elephant hair. Tarzan: An elephant hair? Terk: Like I said, it's stupid, right? Listen, take it from me, go home, okay? Who needs this aggravation? You know, I'm probably gonna leave soon myself. You go, I'll catch up, all right? You see, leave it to me. I told you--Tarzan! Tarzan, no! Gorilla: Ooh! That one hurt him! Terk: Look, oh, oh, there he is! He's alive! Tarzan: Hey guys! Gorillas: Hi. Terk: Oh no, no, no, no, no, come back, come back! Gorillas: This guy's great! Hey, if he lives you should bring him around more often. Come on, come on, let's go get a better seat. Terk: Oh. Tantor: Mom, are you sure this water's sanitary? It looks questionable to me. Elephant: It's fine, honey. Tantor: Yecch! But what about bacteria? Elephant: Tantor, can't you see Mommy's talking? Tantor: Watch out! There's something swimming! It's coming right at you! Elephant: Honey, Mommy's losing her patience. Tantor: But this time I really see something! Elephant: Oh boy. Tantor: Piranha! It's a piranha! Elephant: Sweetheart, there are no piranhas in Africa. Second Elephant: Don't tell the kid that, of course there are piranhas in Africa. Third Elephant: No, she's right. They're native to South America. Tantor: Aah! It's right behind you! Run! Elephant: For the last time, honey, there are no piranhas in-- Second Elephant: MY BUTT! Tantor: I told you! Second Elephant: There's something on my butt! Third Elephant: What is it? Tantor: It's a piranha! Elephants: Piranha! Gorillas: He's dead! We're dead! Aah! We didn't do it! They're the ones! Gorilla: Oh, thank you Kerchak! Terk: Tarzan, buddy, buddy, come on, don't die on me! Don't die on me! You weren't supposed to do it! Tantor: Get away from there! Don't you know a piranha can strip your flesh in seconds? Terk: What? He's not a piranha, he's--he's alive! He's alive! He's alive! Tantor: He's alive! Terk: He's ali--You idiot! You nearly gave me a heart attack, ya happy? Tarzan: Uh-huh. HTTP://COPIONI.CORRIERESPETTACOLO.IT Terk: You--I don't believe it, you got the hair? Tantor: Is that what this is all about? I got a whole tail of them! Gorillas: Tarzan? Terkina? Tarzan & Terk: Oh no. Tantor: Who's that? Tarzan & Terk: My mom. Kala: Tarzan! Tarzan: Hi. Terk: Hi, aunt Kala. Kala: Oh, you scared me! What happened? Tarzan: Well, I... Terk: Um, it's sort of a long, it's involved, because what happened, it was a weird-- Kerchak: What happened? Tarzan: It was my fault, Kerchak. Kala: Tarzan! Tarzan: We were playing, and well, I'm sorry, Kerchak. Kerchak: You almost killed someone! Tarzan: But it was an accident! Kala: He's only a child. Kerchak: That's no excuse, Kala, you can't keep defending him. Kala: But he'll learn. Kerchak: He will never learn. You can't learn to be one of us. Kala: Because you never give him a chance. Kerchak: Give him a chance? Kala, look at him! He will never be one of us. Kala: Kerchak! Tarzan! [...] Kala: Tarzan, what are you doing? Tarzan: Why am I so different? Kala: Because you're covered with mud, that's why. Tarzan: No! Kerchak said I didn't belong in the-- Kala: Close your mouth. Tarzan: Kerchak said I don't belong in the family.
Recommended publications
  • Tarzan's Yell
    OFFICE FOR HARMONIZATION IN THE INTERNAL MARKET (TRADE MARKS AND DESIGNS) The Boards of Appeal DECISION of the Fourth Board of Appeal of 27. September 2007 In Case R 708/2006-4 Edgar Rice Burroughs, Inc. 18354 Ventura Boulevard Tarzana, California 91357 United States of America Applicant/Appellant represented by R.G.C. JENKINS & CO, 26 Caxton Street, GB - London SW1H 0RJ, United Kingdom APPEAL relating to Community trade mark application No 3 661 329 THE FOURTH BOARD OF APPEAL composed of D. Schennen (Chairman and Rapporteur), I. Mayer (Member) and F. López de Rego (Member) Registrar: N. Semjevski gives the following Language of the case: English DECISION OF 27 SEPTEMBER 2007 – R 708/2006-4 – TARZAN YELL (SOUND MARK) 2 Decision Summary of the facts 1 By an application received by the Office by regular mail on 11 February 2004, the applicant filed a Community trade mark application for the following goods and services: Class 9 - Electrical and electronic communications and telecommunications apparatus and instruments; optical, electro-optical, monitoring (other than in-vivo monitoring), radio, television, electrical control, testing (other than in-vivo testing), signalling, checking (supervision), radio paging, radio-telephone and teaching apparatus and instruments, telephones, mobile telephones and telephone handsets; paging apparatus, radio paging apparatus; radio telephone apparatus; computerised personal organisers, telecommunications apparatus and instruments; communications apparatus and instruments; apparatus and instruments for
    [Show full text]
  • Author-As-Franchise-Product: Edgar Rice Burroughs Inc and Tarzan As Historical Branded Entertainment
    53 Chapter 3 Author-as-Franchise-Product: Edgar Rice Burroughs Inc and Tarzan as Historical Branded Entertainment Matthew Freeman University of Nottingham, UK ABSTRACT This chapter explores the historical relationship between the branded media entertainment of Tarzan and the rise of consumer culture in the 1920s and 1930s. It argues that the transmedia licensing of this property across pulp magazines, comics, and radio reflected the growing embrace of brand-franchise logics throughout the business landscape of America at that time. I offer the metaphor of ‘stepping stones’ to understand the brand linkages between these different media products in which consumption of one product led to the consumption of another. More importantly, I analyse the function of Tarzan creator Edgar Rice Burroughs and his company, suggesting that his visibility as franchise-author played a crucial role in constructing these brand linkages between media products. Contextualised as part of the very different cultural landscape of 1920s and 1930s consumer culture, I demonstrate how an autho- rial name operated commercially as much as a corporatised component of the branded entertainment products of Tarzan as the Tarzan character himself. INTRODUCTION By 1975, Edgar Rice Burroughs, Inc., a family-owned corporation founded in March 1923, was reported to be earning in the region of $1 million annually from the sales of texts and products based on the fic- tional character Tarzan. ‘The world-wide gross of Tarzan products sold under license to us is at least $50 million a year,’ asserted Robert M. Hodes, the man in charge of the Tarzan empire at that time (The New York Times, 1975, p.
    [Show full text]
  • The Jungle Tales of Tarzan
    The Jungle Tales Of Tarzan Written in 1919 by Edgar Rice Burroughs (1875-1950) This version originally published in 2005 by Infomotions, Inc. This document is distributed under the GNU Public License. 1 2 Table of contents Chapter 1 - Tarzan's First Love Chapter 2 - The Capture of Tarzan Chapter 3 - The Fight for the Balu Chapter 4 - The God of Tarzan Chapter 5 - Tarzan and the Black Boy Chapter 6 - The Witch-Doctor Seeks Vengeance Chapter 7 - The End of Bukawai Chapter 8 - Lion Chapter 9 - The Nightmare Chapter 10 - Battle for Teeka Chapter 11 - A Jungle Joke Chapter 12 - Rescues the Moon 3 4 Chapter 1 - Tarzan's First Love Teeka, stretched at luxurious ease in the shade of the tropical forest, presented, unquestionably, a most alluring picture of young, feminine loveliness. Or at least so thought Tarzan of the Apes, who squatted upon a low-swinging branch in a near-by tree and looked down upon her. Just to have seen him there, lolling upon the swaying bough of the jungle-forest giant, his brown skin mottled by the brilliant equatorial sunlight which percolated through the leafy canopy of green above him, his clean-limbed body relaxed in graceful ease, his shapely head partly turned in contemplative absorption and his intelligent, gray eyes dreamily devouring the object of their devotion, you would have thought him the reincarnation of some demigod of old. You would not have guessed that in infancy he had suckled at the breast of a hideous, hairy she-ape, nor that in all his conscious past since his parents had passed away in the little cabin by the landlocked harbor at the jungle's verge, he had known no other associates than the sullen bulls and the snarling cows of the tribe of Kerchak, the great ape.
    [Show full text]
  • Animated Stereotypes –
    Animated Stereotypes – An Analysis of Disney’s Contemporary Portrayals of Race and Ethnicity Alexander Lindgren, 36761 Pro gradu-avhandling i engelska språket och litteraturen Handledare: Jason Finch Fakulteten för humaniora, psykologi och teologi Åbo Akademi 2020 ÅBO AKADEMI – FACULTY OF ARTS, PSYCHOLOGY AND THEOLOGY Abstract for Master’s Thesis Subject: English Language and Literature Author: Alexander Lindgren Title: Animated Stereotypes – An Analysis of Disney’s Contemporary Portrayals of Race and Ethnicity Supervisor: Jason Finch Abstract: Walt Disney Animation Studios is currently one of the world’s largest producers of animated content aimed at children. However, while Disney often has been associated with themes such as childhood, magic, and innocence, many of the company’s animated films have simultaneously been criticized for their offensive and quite problematic take on race and ethnicity, as well their heavy reliance on cultural stereotypes. This study aims to evaluate Disney’s portrayals of racial and ethnic minorities, as well as determine whether or not the nature of the company’s portrayals have become more culturally sensitive with time. To accomplish this, seven animated feature films produced by Disney were analyzed. These analyses are of a qualitative nature, with a focus on imagology and postcolonial literary theory, and the results have simultaneously been compared to corresponding criticism and analyses by other authors and scholars. Based on the overall results of the analyses, it does seem as if Disney is becoming more progressive and culturally sensitive with time. However, while most of the recent films are free from the clearly racist elements found in the company’s earlier productions, it is quite evident that Disney still tends to rely heavily on certain cultural stereotypes.
    [Show full text]
  • The Tarzan Series of Edgar Rice Burroughs
    I The Tarzan Series of Edgar Rice Burroughs: Lost Races and Racism in American Popular Culture James R. Nesteby Submitted to the Graduate College of Bowling Green State University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree in Doctor of Philosophy August 1978 Approved: © 1978 JAMES RONALD NESTEBY ALL RIGHTS RESERVED ¡ ¡ in Abstract The Tarzan series of Edgar Rice Burroughs (1875-1950), beginning with the All-Story serialization in 1912 of Tarzan of the Apes (1914 book), reveals deepseated racism in the popular imagination of early twentieth-century American culture. The fictional fantasies of lost races like that ruled by La of Opar (or Atlantis) are interwoven with the realities of racism, particularly toward Afro-Americans and black Africans. In analyzing popular culture, Stith Thompson's Motif-Index of Folk-Literature (1932) and John G. Cawelti's Adventure, Mystery, and Romance (1976) are utilized for their indexing and formula concepts. The groundwork for examining explanations of American culture which occur in Burroughs' science fantasies about Tarzan is provided by Ray R. Browne, publisher of The Journal of Popular Culture and The Journal of American Culture, and by Gene Wise, author of American Historical Explanations (1973). The lost race tradition and its relationship to racism in American popular fiction is explored through the inner earth motif popularized by John Cleves Symmes' Symzonla: A Voyage of Discovery (1820) and Edgar Allan Poe's The narrative of A. Gordon Pym (1838); Burroughs frequently uses the motif in his perennially popular romances of adventure which have made Tarzan of the Apes (Lord Greystoke) an ubiquitous feature of American culture.
    [Show full text]
  • Thinking Movement Moving Thought Programme.Pdf
    THINKING MOVEMENT, MOVING THOUGHT 22 September 2017 9am – 6.30pm Labanarium presents this one day and movement and psychology. Will Wollen (University of Kent); symposium in collaboration with the Workshops, seminars, papers and Christopher Simpson (Northampton Centre for Performance Philosophy encounters in movement and thinking University) and Dr Paola Crespi which will focus on the relationships given by Cate Deicher CMA and Amy (Goldsmiths University London). between movement and philosophy Shapiro, PhD (Alverno College, U.S); LABANARIUM.COM Dr Paola Crespi Rhythm Will Help LECTURE Paola’s work has been published in Besides the more straightforward Workers international peer-reviewed journals aim of introducing Laban’s Dr Paola Crespi is a Visiting Research paper presentation such as Body & Society, Subjectivity, rhythmanalysis as found in both Fellow at the Topology Research 2 -3 pm Theatre, Dance & Performance his notes and his drawings to a Unit at Goldsmiths and a Lecturer at Ivy Theatre Training and online on the Theory, wider public, this intervention Anglia Ruskin University and at the Culture&Society website. Paola sits seeks to draw attention to the Thinking Movement, Moving Thought University of Suffolk. She holds a on the editorial board of Evental dialogue between cultural theory PhD in Media Studies (Goldsmiths), A one day symposium focusing on the relationships between movement, Aesthetics: An Independent Journal of and performance studies that the an MRes in Humanities and Philosophy and she is Section Editor material itself affords. Far from psychology and philosophy Cultural Studies (London for Cultural Studies and Critical Theory being restricted to the field of the Consortium) and a BA (Hons) in of the Open Journal of the Humanities.
    [Show full text]
  • Songs by Title Karaoke Night with the Patman
    Songs By Title Karaoke Night with the Patman Title Versions Title Versions 10 Years 3 Libras Wasteland SC Perfect Circle SI 10,000 Maniacs 3 Of Hearts Because The Night SC Love Is Enough SC Candy Everybody Wants DK 30 Seconds To Mars More Than This SC Kill SC These Are The Days SC 311 Trouble Me SC All Mixed Up SC 100 Proof Aged In Soul Don't Tread On Me SC Somebody's Been Sleeping SC Down SC 10CC Love Song SC I'm Not In Love DK You Wouldn't Believe SC Things We Do For Love SC 38 Special 112 Back Where You Belong SI Come See Me SC Caught Up In You SC Dance With Me SC Hold On Loosely AH It's Over Now SC If I'd Been The One SC Only You SC Rockin' Onto The Night SC Peaches And Cream SC Second Chance SC U Already Know SC Teacher, Teacher SC 12 Gauge Wild Eyed Southern Boys SC Dunkie Butt SC 3LW 1910 Fruitgum Co. No More (Baby I'm A Do Right) SC 1, 2, 3 Redlight SC 3T Simon Says DK Anything SC 1975 Tease Me SC The Sound SI 4 Non Blondes 2 Live Crew What's Up DK Doo Wah Diddy SC 4 P.M. Me So Horny SC Lay Down Your Love SC We Want Some Pussy SC Sukiyaki DK 2 Pac 4 Runner California Love (Original Version) SC Ripples SC Changes SC That Was Him SC Thugz Mansion SC 42nd Street 20 Fingers 42nd Street Song SC Short Dick Man SC We're In The Money SC 3 Doors Down 5 Seconds Of Summer Away From The Sun SC Amnesia SI Be Like That SC She Looks So Perfect SI Behind Those Eyes SC 5 Stairsteps Duck & Run SC Ooh Child SC Here By Me CB 50 Cent Here Without You CB Disco Inferno SC Kryptonite SC If I Can't SC Let Me Go SC In Da Club HT Live For Today SC P.I.M.P.
    [Show full text]
  • Walt Disney World Coin Press Checklist Fill in the Mickey Head Once You Have Collected Each Coin!
    Walt Disney World Coin Press Checklist Fill in the Mickey head once you have collected each coin! Walt Disney World Coin Press Checklist Contents: Disney’s Animal Kingdom Disney’s Hollywood Studios Epcot Magic Kingdom Downtown Disney WDW Resorts & Nearby Locations These Presses are currently out for refurbishment. Last Updated: April 29, 2010 Walt Disney World Coin Press Checklist Fill in the Mickey head once you have collected each coin! Out of the Wild #1 Lion King 5 of 7, Rafiki Celebrate Culture South Africa Tarzan 7 of 8, Jane & Tarzan The Outpost Shop #1 Penny Presses Jungle Book 6 of 6, Share Khan Beastly Bazaar Safari Minnie Mouse Tarzan 4 of 8, Tantor Safari Pluto Lion King 3 of 7, Hula Timon Safari Goofy The Outpost Shop #2 Stink Bug Chester & Hester's Dinosaur Treasures #1 Tarzan 8 of 8, Jane Iguanodon Lion King 1 of 7, Simba Camtaurus Alioramus Rainforest Café #1 Hot Air Balloon, Orlando, FL Chester & Hester's Dinosaur Treasures #2 Mockingbird, Florida State Bird Tarzan 3 of 8, Terk Crab w/ Sunglasses, Orlando, FL Mickey with Fossil Alligator, Orlando, FL Lion King 6 of 7, Scar Restaurantosaurus #1 Dawa Bar Styracosaurus Lion Saltasaurus Hippopotamus Ankylosaurus Rhino Restaurantosaurus #2 Duka La Filimu #1 Tarzan 1 of 8, Tarzan & Jane Safari Mickey Duckosaurus Donald Safari Donald Dinosaur Skeleton Safari Goofy Wildlife Express Train Station #1 Duka La Filimu #2 Tarzan 2 of 8, Swinging Tarzan Safari Minnie Tarzan 5 of 8, Professor Safari Pooh Lion King 4 of 7, Pumba Safari Tigger Island Mercantile #1 Festival of The Lion
    [Show full text]
  • TARZAN of the APES SERIES - Complete 25 Book Collection (Illustrated): the Return of Tarzan, the Beasts of Tarzan, the Son of Tarzan, Tarzan and the Jewels
    mV6Rq (Read ebook) TARZAN OF THE APES SERIES - Complete 25 Book Collection (Illustrated): The Return of Tarzan, The Beasts of Tarzan, The Son of Tarzan, Tarzan and the Jewels ... Lion, Tarzan the Terrible and many more Online [mV6Rq.ebook] TARZAN OF THE APES SERIES - Complete 25 Book Collection (Illustrated): The Return of Tarzan, The Beasts of Tarzan, The Son of Tarzan, Tarzan and the Jewels ... Lion, Tarzan the Terrible and many more Pdf Free Edgar Rice Burroughs audiobook | *ebooks | Download PDF | ePub | DOC Download Now Free Download Here Download eBook #85650 in eBooks 2017-04-20 2017-04-20File Name: B0727RRBNH | File size: 57.Mb Edgar Rice Burroughs : TARZAN OF THE APES SERIES - Complete 25 Book Collection (Illustrated): The Return of Tarzan, The Beasts of Tarzan, The Son of Tarzan, Tarzan and the Jewels ... Lion, Tarzan the Terrible and many more before purchasing it in order to gage whether or not it would be worth my time, and all praised TARZAN OF THE APES SERIES - Complete 25 Book Collection (Illustrated): The Return of Tarzan, The Beasts of Tarzan, The Son of Tarzan, Tarzan and the Jewels ... Lion, Tarzan the Terrible and many more: 0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. Good readingBy Jim NussbaumerWell written - but dated of course. It is nice having all of the books in one place - but they sound a lot alike after a while.0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. Five StarsBy Edward TuckerNice to find them all in one place.0 of 0 people found the following review helpful.
    [Show full text]
  • Tarzan the Censored
    TARZAN THE CENSORED by Jerry L. Schneider Forward In "Edgar Rice Burroughs: Master of Adventure" by Richard A. Lupoff, the author stated that the Ballantine Books' versions of the Tarzan series were edited (evidently for political correctness), not the "all complete and unabridged" as Ballantine stated on the paperbacks. So, armed with the earliest hardcover editions that I owned in my collection (McClurg, A. L. Burt, Grosset & Dunlap, Burroughs Inc., and Canaveral Press) and post 1969 Ballantine editions, I scanned through them for discrepancies and changes. There were changes from the early hardcovers that I found in some of the paperbacks. Some of the books in the Tarzan series were edited for "political correctness" with regards to ethnicity dialects and derogatory terms. Hard to read dialects (or hard to typeset) were changed to an easier form (i.e. hit's changed to it's, heat to eat, and hour to our), while extremely derogatory terms such as Jew (see Tarzan and the Golden Lion) and nigger were altered or eliminated (not for the betterment of the story as the alteration in the words has lessened the impact the originals imparted to the reader—the level of anger toward the character who spoke the words has been lessened). The term "black" remained in place in some books but removed from others—no rhyme or reason to the changes. Esmeralda's original dialect in "Tarzan of the Apes" remained in place through 1969, then edited downward to an easier and friendlier version. Because of these changes, an in-depth look at the various editions of "Tarzan of the Apes" is shown below, while the other books in the Tarzan series are only compared by using an early hardcover version and the first version that was edited, usually the Ballantine edition.
    [Show full text]
  • Kids Movie Trivia Questions #6
    KIDS MOVIE TRIVIA QUESTIONS #6 ( www.TriviaChamp.com ) 1> What are the two boys hunting at the beginning of the movie, "The Sword and the Stone"? a. Moose b. Deer c. Duck d. Bears 2> In which movie would you see the character "Lightning McQueen"? a. The Black Cauldron b. Cars c. The Sword in the Stone d. Peter Pan 3> What is the name of the city in the movie, "Monsters Inc"? a. Monstropolis b. Scary Town c. Monster City d. Scareville 4> Seen in the movie "Toy Story," what kind of animal is Bullseye? a. Dragonfly b. Cat c. Turtle d. Horse 5> Who is the main villain in the Disney film "101 Dalmatians"? a. Montgomery b. Hades c. Buzz d. Cruella de Vil 6> What kind of fruit does the evil witch give to Snow White in Disney's first animated feature film, "Snow White"? a. Pear b. Apple c. Cherry d. Orange 7> What kind of creature does Jafar turn into in the film "Aladdin"? a. Snake b. Scorpion c. Dragon d. Spider 8> What kind of animal swallowed an alarm clock? a. Parrot b. Lion c. Warthog d. Crocodile 9> What color is Toothless? a. Black b. Yellow c. Red d. Green 10> What country is the setting for the movie "Brave"? a. Mexico b. America c. Russia d. Scotland 11> Who is the main villain in the 2010 Disney film "Tangled"? a. Medusa b. Gothel c. Quasimodo d. Maleficent 12> What is the name of the princess in the Disney movie "Frozen"? a. Jasmine b.
    [Show full text]
  • Tarzan in the Early-20Th Century French Fantasy Landscape By
    Wesleyan University The Honors College The Missing Link: Tarzan in the Early-20th Century French Fantasy Landscape by Medha Swaminathan Class of 2019 A thesis submitted to the faculty of Wesleyan University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Degree of Bachelor of Arts with Departmental Honors in French Studies Middletown, Connecticut April, 2019 Table of Contents Introduction ................................................................................................................... 1 Embracing the Invented in the “Benevolent” Colonial ................................................ 9 Imagining “Africa” ..................................................................................................... 19 Le Tour du Monde en Un Jour: Tarzan and the 1930s Paris Colonial Exhibitions .... 36 “Civilization” vs. “Civilized” vs. “Savage” ................................................................ 49 Homme Idéal or Missing Link? Fetish, Fascination, and Fear in French Eugenics ... 57 Sex, Youth, Beauty, Valor, and the Légionnaire ........................................................ 70 Saturnin Farandoul: Tarzan’s French Foil? ................................................................ 81 “Comment dit-on sites de rêve en anglais ?” .............................................................. 96 References ................................................................................................................. 100 Acknowledgements This project would not have been possible without an incredible amount
    [Show full text]