Carry On Up the
Jungle
Dir: Gerald Thomas
1970
***
Carry On Up the Jungle is the nineteenth Carry On film to be
made and although there is much to enjoy, it is one of the more half-hearted
entries. When I say half-hearted I don't mean in terms of set, I mean in
term of story. The story is one huge misconception, with Africa being confused
with India, Africans being cannibals and the mix of Tarzan spoof and 'Cave
Girl' parody confusing the story. It just seems like it was written
in a hurry, which it more than likely was. It is a huge departure from the
sixteenth Carry On, Carry On Up the Khyber, that got it so right and only two
years previous. It also recycles many of the great lines from previous Carry On
films which is very noticeable and rather lazy of Peter Rogers
and Gerald
Thomas. It also features Bernard Bresslaw 'blacked up' which is a rather
unfortunate sign of the times. The biggest issue I have with the film and the
biggest flaw most Carry On fans will have, is that Kenneth Williams is absent.
That said, Terry Scott as a loin-clothed Tarzan is a work of genius.
Frankie Howard returns of his second and final Carry On outing
and is a welcome inclusion as is the great Kenneth Connor after a nine
film sabbatical. One wonders whether the film would have worked better had
it been split into two different movies; a Tarzan spoof and a 'Cave women'
film. Alas, Carry On Up the Jungle
represents the franchise just as the wheels were starting to loosen, with
the franchise losing its way from here on with only one really good film to
come out of the twelve that would follow.
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