
Tarzan the Ape Man
1932 • Action, Adventure • NR
James Parker and Harry Holt are on an expedition in Africa in search of the elephant burial grounds that will provide enough ivory to make them rich. Parker's beautiful daughter Jane arrives unexpectedly to join them. Jane is terrified when Tarzan and his ape friends abduct her, but when she returns to her father's expedition she has second thoughts about leaving Tarzan.
Runtime: 1h 40m
Why you should read the novels
Before you stream another version of Tarzan, discover the original story that captivated the world. Edgar Rice Burroughs’ Tarzan of the Apes delivers the full origin: a marooned infant, a perilous upbringing among the great apes, and a self-made hero shaped by survival and curiosity.
Reading the novel reveals Tarzan’s mind at work—his self-education from books, his evolving morality, and his early encounters with civilization. Burroughs blends romance, danger, and identity into a gripping, page-turning adventure that cinema can only hint at.
Continue with The Return of Tarzan to experience globe-trotting intrigue, the lost city of Opar, deeper romance with Jane, and the broader mythology that built a century of Tarzan storytelling. The books offer richer world-building, nuanced character growth, and unforgettable pulp thrills.
Adaptation differences
Tarzan the Ape Man (1932) reshapes the setup. In the novels, Jane arrives after a shipwreck involving Professor Porter’s party, while in the film she joins a safari led by her father (James Parker) and Harry Holt seeking the fabled elephant graveyard. The screen romance emerges through abduction and rescue beats, whereas Burroughs builds a slow-burn connection grounded in shared trials and Tarzan’s growing understanding of human society.
Burroughs’ Tarzan is highly articulate and intellectually curious—teaching himself to read from his parents’ books and later learning languages with help from D’Arnot. The 1932 movie streamlines this into a minimal, broken style of speech and iconic vocalizations, prioritizing visual storytelling and athletic spectacle over the character’s linguistic and philosophical development.
Key identity themes are transformed. In the novels, Tarzan’s lineage as John Clayton, Lord Greystoke, and the tensions around inheritance, honor, and European society are central. The film largely omits aristocratic threads, European episodes, and D’Arnot’s pivotal mentorship, focusing instead on jungle action and romance.
Major plot elements differ, too. The books introduce Opar, political intrigue, and broader pulp adventures that expand the world beyond the jungle; the 1932 adaptation substitutes an invented elephant graveyard quest and sensationalized encounters. Burroughs’ imagined Africa features the Mangani and a layered internal logic, while the film leans on studio-built exotica and pre-Code spectacle, reshaping tone, stakes, and cultural texture.
Tarzan the Ape Man inspired from
The Return of Tarzan
by Edgar Rice Burroughs
Tarzan of the Apes
by Edgar Rice Burroughs













