Tarzan's Deadly Silence Explained

Tarzan's Deadly Silence
Starring:Ron Ely
Jock Mahoney
Woody Strode
Manuel Padilla, Jr.
Director:Robert L. Friend
Producer:Sy Weintraub
Leon Benson
Music:Walter Greene
Distributor:National General Pictures
Runtime:88 minutes
Language:English

Tarzan's Deadly Silence is a 1970 adventure film composed of an edited two-part television episode of Tarzan released as a feature. It stars Ron Ely as Tarzan. Former Tarzan actor Jock Mahoney and Woody Strode (a veteran of two previous Tarzan films) co-star. The film was produced by Sy Weintraub and Leon Benson, written by Lee Erwin, Jack H. Robinson, John Considine, and Tim Considine (based on the character created by Edgar Rice Burroughs) and directed by Robert L. Friend.

Premise

Tarzan loses his hearing after a bomb blast, and is hunted through the jungle by the ruthless Colonel.

Cast

Production notes

The film consists of The Deadly Silence, a two-part episode of Ely's NBC Television Tarzan series.

Jock Mahoney's first appearance in Tarzan films was as Coy Banton, a villain opposite Gordon Scott's Tarzan in the 1960 film Tarzan the Magnificent. He took over the role of the Ape Man in 1962's Tarzan Goes to India. This was followed by his final turn as Tarzan in Tarzan's Three Challenges (1963).

Woody Strode portrayed Ramo in Tarzan's Fight for Life (1958), and Khan in Tarzan's Three Challenges (1963).

Release

The film opened April 22, 1970 at Loew's Mid-City Theatre in St. Louis and grossed $4,500 in its week there in a double bill with Day of Anger.[1]

Notes and References

  1. Variety. Picture Grosses. April 29, 1970. 12.