Her Jungle Love
Her Jungle Love
NR | 15 April 1938 (USA)
Her Jungle Love Trailers

While searching the South Pacific for a missing aviator, Bob Mitchell and Jimmy Wallace are caught in a typhoon and crack up on an island, escaping unharmed with the aid of Tura, a beautiful jungle girl who is the only inhabitant of the island and is believed a goddess by the natives of the adjoining islands. The three are about to leave the island on a make-shift raft when a gang of savage tribesman land, headed by Kuasa, a half-mad potentate who informs them that all whites are his mortal enemies because an Englishwoman once spurned his love and he got his revenge by stealing her daughter, who is Tura.

Reviews
Chonesday It's one of the most original films you'll likely see all year, which, depending on your threshold for certifiably crazy storylines, could be a rewarding experience or one that frustrates you.
Robert Joyner The plot isn't so bad, but the pace of storytelling is too slow which makes people bored. Certain moments are so obvious and unnecessary for the main plot. I would've fast-forwarded those moments if it was an online streaming. The ending looks like implying a sequel, not sure if this movie will get one
Asad Almond A clunky actioner with a handful of cool moments.
Beulah Bram A film of deceptively outspoken contemporary relevance, this is cinema at its most alert, alarming and alive.
jovana-13676 Trigger warning - this film contains the sweetest kissing and the cutest Ray Milland ever! I could watch Dorothy Lamour play with him on the beach for two straight hours, but they had to come up with some plot and soon enough there's this army of extras interrupting their foreplay. And just when you think they spoiled it, Dorothy emerges from all that mess in a spectacular ceremonial outfit and then some horrific action Indian Jones style follows. Photography is like a dream and highlights the beauty of the main protagonists so much so that it can cause serious hyperventilation - be warned.
mark.waltz This silly melodrama starts off o.k. and is pretty cute until the entrance of a despicable villain played by J. Carroll Naish. It all starts when pilot Ray Milland crash lands on a tropical island where Princess Dorothy Lamour rules with the aide of a cute lion cub and a mischievous chimpanzee. She greets Mill and by tossing a knife at him while the chimp tosses coconuts.Romance ensues almost immediately but is threatened by Naish's arrival with a battalion of angry natives. This leads to Lamour, Mill and and his comical sidekick Lynne Overman all being held captive ad approaching alligators prepare for a meal of human flesh by clicking their chops. Silliness abound with Lamour looking fetching in her sarong and wearing lipstick presumably made out of berries.The first half gives way to stereotypical native uprisings with a twist towards the end involving the sudden introduction of Milland's hi- fallutin' fiancée. This just stretches out the plot and takes the action aboard ship to get it off the island. Overman's schtick gets tiresome after a while. Colorful but only slightly camp, this is slightly disappointing considering all the hype I've heard about this over the years.
dougandwin How well I remember first seeing this movie over 60 years ago, and the climatic scene of the volcanic eruption and the crocodile invasion has stuck with me ever since. It was Dorothy Lamour's third movie in which she spends all her time in a sarong, and does it very well - the second time they put Ray Milland with her also!. The story is fairly hackneyed, but the film looks great in Technicolor, and the visual effects for 1938 are quite good. I enjoyed the principals, along with the supporting cast of Lynne Overman (who apparently had to be in every epic produced by Paramount) , and J. Carrol Naish as the required villain who kidnapped Dorothy as a child, and of course, gets his come-uppance in a spectacular way. A good way to spend and hour and a half, but cannot be taken seriously.