The Legend of Tarzan

The Legend of Tarzan

2016 • Action, Adventure, FantasyPG-13
Tarzan, having acclimated to life in London, is called back to his former home in the jungle to investigate the activities at a mining encampment.
Runtime: 1h 49m

Why you shoud read the novel

Discover the original Tarzan saga in Edgar Rice Burroughs’ "Tarzan of the Apes," where the legend was born! The novel immerses readers in the raw, primal world of the African jungle, following Tarzan’s extraordinary journey from orphaned infant to lord of the apes. You’ll experience the depth of his internal struggles, his identity, and his first encounters with civilized society in a way no film adaptation can capture. Reading the source novel allows you to witness the nuances of Tarzan’s relationships—with the apes, the wilderness, and with Jane Porter—unfiltered by cinematic re-interpretation. Burroughs’ exploration of civilization versus nature and human versus animal instincts are more profound and thought-provoking in text. By picking up the book, you join generations of readers who engaged with timeless themes of identity, humanity, and belonging. The experience is immersive and personal, letting you visualize Burroughs’ world, characters, and narrative at your own pace—something a two-hour movie simply can’t rival.

Adaptation differences

One primary difference is the narrative time period and structure. The film, "The Legend of Tarzan," is set several years after Tarzan has assimilated into English society as John Clayton III, whereas Burroughs’ novel centers primarily on Tarzan’s upbringing among the apes and early adulthood. This shift results in much of Tarzan’s formative story being told only through flashbacks in the movie, rather than as the central plot as in the book. Another major divergence is the portrayal of Jane Porter. In Burroughs’ novel, Jane is an American who meets Tarzan for the first time in the jungle, and her relationship with him develops through mutual discovery. The movie, however, depicts Jane as Tarzan’s already-established wife, who is both more modern and proactive, taking on a greater role in the film’s central conflict. The film invents new villains and political circumstances for the sake of dramatic impact. In the novel, Tarzan’s adversaries are mostly other jungle inhabitants or rival humans with personal motives. The film introduces historical elements like the Belgian King Leopold II and his exploitation of the Congo, using real-world colonial atrocities to shape the plot and create new layers of conflict absent from the original book. Lastly, the source novel emphasizes Tarzan’s struggle with his dual identity—torn between his animal upbringing and his human inheritance, complicated by questions of love, civilization, and belonging. While the movie touches on these internal themes, it is structured more as an action-adventure with a focus on external conflicts and spectacle, often at the expense of the introspective character development found in Burroughs’ writing.

The Legend of Tarzan inspired from

Tarzan of the Apes
by Edgar Rice Burroughs