Exotic Hollywood

Production still from Tarzan and His Mate 1934 / Directors: Cedric Gibbons, James C McKay / Image courtesy: Park Circus / View full image
In 2018 the Gallery’s Australian Cinémathèque presents major film programs complementing exhibitions ‘Patricia Piccinini: Curious Affection’ and ‘APT9’ alongside our free stand-alone film programs ‘All the Worlds Memories’ until 24 February, ‘Exotic Hollywood’ 4 – 28 February and ‘Rainer Werner Fassbinder’ (Part 2) 1 June – 4 July.
Exotic Hollywood
In the 1920s and 1930s cinema audiences craved adventure and melodrama from Hollywood. Amid the glamour and gangster films popular at the time came a wave of films that sought to capture the allure of faraway lands. An eclectic mix of documentary, drama and escapist fantasy, these films transplanted topical narratives of shifting gender, race and social values to the dramatic foreign landscapes of Africa, the Middle East, the South Seas and Asia.
‘Exotic Hollywood’ is a free program that brings together a selection of these films drawn from the time between World War One and World War Two, when international tourism was still only accessible to the affluent. It offers insights into the American imagination and its conflicted relationship with cultural, racial and sexual views of the time. It depicts thrilling, if not accurate, tales of adventure and heroism that enticed audiences with dreams of an unspoiled Eden where, after the horrors of World War One, freedom and redemption were possible.
IMAGINING THE EXOTIC – HOLLYWOOD AND IDEAS OF PARADISE
Join Amanda Slack-Smith, Associate Curator, Australian Cinémathèque, for an illustrated talk on Hollywood’s early visions of paradise and their escapist narratives set in untamed locations.
12.30pm – 1.00pm Sunday 4 February 2018 | Free, no bookings required
Opening weekend screenings
SIMBA: THE KING OF THE BEASTS 1928 Ages 15+
1.00pm Sunday 4 February 2018 (1hr 27mins) | Free, no bookings required
TARZAN AND HIS MATE 1934 PG
3.00pm Sunday 4 February 2018 (1hr 44mins) | Free, no bookings required
The opening weekend of ‘Exotic Hollywood’ brings together two African Adventures; the docu-drama Simba: King of the Beasts which followed husband and wife team Martin and Osa Johnson on their four-year African Safari, one of the first to ever be filmed, and its frothy Hollywood equivalent Tarzan and his Mate, a risqué jungle romance featuring the beloved characters Tarzan and Jane.
SIMBA: THE KING OF THE BEASTS

Production still from Simba: The King of the Beasts 1928 / Director: Martin E Johnson / Image courtesy: Milestone Entertainment / View full image
Simba: King of the Beasts offered 1920’s Western audiences insight into a continent far removed from their every day. With its dramatic images of charging rhinos, stampeding elephants and other wildlife experiences, the intrepid adventures of husband and wife team Martin and Osa Johnson inspired generations of viewers to dream of an untamed Africa. Shot primarily in Kenya, the Johnsons filmed both the local people and the wildlife around them in a way not previously documented. Experts at knowing their audience, the Johnsons placed a young and vibrant Osa in front of the camera while Martin filmed. Embodying the ideals of a modern woman, Osa was filmed wearing pants, carrying a shotgun, and with the help of clever editing, showcasing her resourcefulness from shooting a charging rhino to whipping up an apple pie over a camp oven. The subsequent exposure from the documentary, and others that followed, created a level of audience adoration previously seen only for movie stars.
TARZAN AND HIS MATE

Production still from Tarzan and His Mate 1934 / Directors: Cedric Gibbons, James C McKay / Image courtesy: Park Circus / View full image
Tarzan and his Mate, the raunchiest of the MGM Tarzan films, was made just prior to the introduction of the Hays Code (a regulatory code enforcing acceptable moral standards for the production of US films). A year after the events in Tarzan and the Ape Man (1932), which saw Jane leave behind her worldly life in London for her love of Tarzan (and an African jungle existence unfettered by the social mores of ‘civilised’ society), her former boyfriend Harry Holt returns to Africa to attempt once again to plunder the elephant burial ground. He also hopes to lure Jane away from life with Tarzan with a selection of evening gowns, shoes, make-up and other trappings of society.
Holt and his sidekick deal with their masculine crisis with wisecracks and cigars, while the scantily clad Tarzan (Johnny Weissmuller) and Jane (Maureen O’Sullivan) swing through the trees, playing erotically charged games. Jane narrates their activities with references to English high society rituals – mocking her civilised past (and its men) and championing her life with Tarzan in their jungle paradise.
Interesting facts: TARZAN AND HIS MATE

Johnny Weissmuller and Maureen O’Sullivan on the set of Tarzan and His Mate 1934 showing the Indian elephant without prosthetic ears / Directors: Cedric Gibbons, James C McKay / Image courtesy: Park Circus / View full image

Production still from Tarzan and His Mate 1934 / Directors: Cedric Gibbons, James C McKay / Image courtesy: Park Circus / View full image
Location shots mingle with surreal studio settings (Tarzan’s blissful treetop hideaway) and back-projected ethnographic footage to create MGM’s Africa – a collage of Western fantasies about the continent.
While the story is set in Africa the elephants featured are Asian elephants from India as the MGM studio already owned several Asian elephants and considered them easier to handle. To mimic their larger African counterparts, the Asian elephants were fitted with prosthetic tusks and much larger prosthetic ears.
This restored print from the Academy Film Archive, Los Angeles, features the rare skinny-dipping sequence which had censors hot under the collar in 1934. The scene was originally filmed three different ways to appease the censors each showing a variation of the scene and its stages of undress. All cuts failed to pass and the scene was thought lost until it was discovered in the Turner Entertainment vaults in 1990. Johnny Weissmuller frolics underwater alongside fellow Olympic swimmer Josephine McKim, acting as a body double for actress Maureen O’Sullivan.
DELVE DEEPER INTO exotic hollywood / explore the screening program
QAGOMA is the only Australian art gallery with purpose-built facilities dedicated to film and the moving image. The Australian Cinémathèque provides an ongoing program of film and video that you’re unlikely to see elsewhere, offering a rich and diverse experience of the moving image, showcasing the work of influential filmmakers and international cinema, rare 35mm prints, recent restorations and silent films with live musical accompaniment. As we do not screen trailers prior to films we suggest you arrive early to allow plenty of time to enter and find a seat. For newcomers to the Cinémathèque here’s a map and information to help you find your way.