The Lost Volcano

1950 "MIGHTIEST VOLCANIC ERUPTION EVER FILMED!"
5.6| 1h16m| NR| en
Details

Little David Gordon lives in the jungle with his parents Ruth and Fred, along with their servant Nona. David likes living there while his father captures wild animals; he's made friends with Bomba the jungle boy, who has shown him a great deal about life in the jungle. One day two adventurers come looking for ancient treasure in the shadow of a live volcano.

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Monogram Pictures

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NekoHomey Purely Joyful Movie!
Inadvands Boring, over-political, tech fuzed mess
Ketrivie It isn't all that great, actually. Really cheesy and very predicable of how certain scenes are gonna turn play out. However, I guess that's the charm of it all, because I would consider this one of my guilty pleasures.
Hadrina The movie's neither hopeful in contrived ways, nor hopeless in different contrived ways. Somehow it manages to be wonderful
mark.waltz Tommy Ivo is poised for his own jungle boy series that never happened as the end of the B movie was imminent. This third installment of the Monogram series has Tarzan's son, now Bomba, befriending the lonely Ivo, trying to convince his parents (Donald Woods and Marjorie Lord) of the existence of the elusive Bomba, a legend of fantasy to adults yet the obvious hero to an impressionable young boy. Add in Elena Verdugo as an exotic jungle girl and some bad white men, hidden treasure, and of course, an active volcano, and the stage is set for an action packed programmer that is satisfactory, if just barely adequate.In spite of that, Ivo holds his own opposite Johnny Sheffield as Bomba, and it's a curious idea that so early in the series, the obvious ploy to promote a possible new jungle boy now that Sheffield was not quite a boy. The film stars off slowly but quickly picks up speed when the bad guys (lead by John Ridgley) kidnap Ivo. From there on, it's adventurous fun and fraught with tension, Indiana Jones like thrills, yet silly and often melodramatic serial like camp.
utgard14 The third entry in Monogram's Bomba series starring Johnny Sheffield has our monosyllabic hero befriending the son of an animal trapper. The boy's parents (Donald Woods, Marjorie Lord) believe Bomba is the boy's imaginary friend. When some bad men try to force the boy to take them to the ruins of a lost city near an active volcano, Bomba comes to the rescue.Child actor Tommy Ivo plays the boy who idolizes Bomba and gives the corniest 'aw-shucks' performance this side of Timmy from the Lassie TV show. Donald Woods is his usual stiff self. Pretty Marjorie Lord and Elena Verdugo represent the fairer sex in this one, for better or worse. Bomba really needed a regular cast of characters like Tarzan had. The lack of one hurts the series, I think. This has the expected amounts of stock footage and rear projection effects all of the Bomba movies have. The climax goes on way too long. It's a decent B jungle adventure picture but nothing remarkable. Which is par for the course with this series. Might play better for the kiddos. But watch out for that python scene!
lugonian THE LOST VOLCANO (Monogram, 1950), written and directed by Ford Beebe, the third installment in the "Bomba the Jungle Boy" series, as based on the character created by Roy Rockwell, is a well-made programmer. While done mostly in studio bound sets or back-lots, fine production values are very much evident here, especially with some intense scenes with characters inside an active volcano. The story gets underway as Paul Gordon (Donald Woods), a zoologist, along with his assistant natives, taking a rest stop after trapping and caging wild animals. Observing them through their long journey home is Bomba (Johnny Sheffield), a teenage jungle boy, awaiting the opportunity to free the animals while the men sleep for the night. The next morning Gordon finds his captured animals gone. He's told by one of his tribesmen that they were released by Bomba, whom Gordon dismisses as some sort of myth. Returning to his cottage where his wife, Ruth (Marjorie Lord) and son, David (Tommy Ivo) are staying with Nona (Elena Verdugo), their native housekeeper, Gordon becomes even more disturbed when David claims to know Bomba and that he's for real. Even though Nona has witnessed David and Bomba's activities together, Gordon still refuses to accept his son's imaginary friend. Hoping to remove David's influence on Bomba, the Gordons agree to send David to a boys school in Capetown to overcome his loneliness. Entering the scene is Doctor Charles Langley(Grandon Rhodes) from the Cairo Museum, traveling with his guides, Barton (John Ridgely) and Higgins (Don Harvey). Langley, searching for a missing ancient city believed to be buried somewhere near an reactivated volcano, hopes that Gordon could lead them there. It is then learned that a golden knife with precious stones David acquired from Bomba happens to be part of that lost treasure. As a favor to the Gordons, Barton and Higgins agree to drive David by jeep to the Capetown school, though actually they use him to show them the way to the treasure inside the lost volcano. Because David refuses to honor their demands, mainly for keeping Bomba's place a secret, the men hold him hostage until he does. Sensing David in great danger, Nona warns the Gordons and Langley. When Bomba learns what has happened to David, he swings into action, racing against time to rescue the boy from the bad men who'll stop at nothing to get what they want.Playing like a Saturday matinée serial, THE LOST VOLCANO, is an improvement over the previous two "Bomba" entries. Though routinely done, a familiar theme about a lonely child seeking companionship is hardly original yet great storytelling from a child's point of view. It brings about frustrations for a youngster who's not believed or taken seriously when talking about his special friend. This basic element is reminiscent to Val Lewton's classic tale of THE CURSE OF THE CAT PEOPLE (RKO Radio, 1944) where lonely child (Ann Carter) finds love and companionship from a woman, Irena (Simone Simon), who happens to be a ghost. Her father (Kent Smith) refuses to believe her story, and punishes her for telling such tales. At least Bomba is not a ghost. He's categorized simply as a imaginary friend made up by David. When David is unable to produce Bomba in the flesh, he's forbidden by his father to ever to speak of him again. While Bomba could have made his presence known, he chooses not to in fear of being put to captivity like a caged animal.Tommy Ivo, the boy in question, shows to be having a great time with his role, especially when playing jungle boy wearing only leopard skin loincloth provided him by Bomba. Bomba not only shows David the ropes of vine swinging, but methods of jungle survival as well. Ivo's David is that or an ordinary kid who hero worships Bomba as a hero and role model. For Bomba, he looks upon David as a little brother he never had who fulfills his time of jungle living solitude.As an added bonus, there's typical jungle suspense grabbers of Bomba wrestling a crocodile, a large python wrapping itself around a villain, an earthquake and volcano eruptions. The supporting players of familiar faces helps, Donald Woods and John Ridgely for example, along with Marjorie Lord, best known as Danny Thomas's wife, Kathy, in the TV series "Make Room for Daddy." THE LOST VOLCANO, one one of the few "Bomba" adventures distributed to home video and DVD, is often listed at 67 minutes. The print presented on Turner Classic Movies (TCM premiere December 3, 2011) is clocked at 75 minutes. Either way, THE LOST VOLCANO is acceptable viewing for young and old alike. Next in the series: BOMBA AND THE HIDDEN CITY (1950). (**1/2)
bkoganbing This film in the Bomba the Jungle Boy series has Johnny Sheffield making friends with the son of Donald Woods and Marjorie Lord who are in the jungle for Woods's work as a naturalist. The parents don't believe that Bomba exists, but their maid Elena Verdugo sure believes in the legend.Some visitors come archaeologist Grandon Rhodes and his guides Don Harvey and John Ridgely and young Tommy Ivo as the son shows him a jewel encrusted dagger from a lost city in an extinct volcano that's right next a very much live one. Rhodes sees another finding like Schleimann did with Troy, but the other two see loot. They kidnap Ivo and force him to lead them to the treasure in the volcano with Bomba and the parents in hot pursuit.I think you see where this is going. There was something kind of sweet about Bomba being lonely and making friends with young Ivo who in fact does look like him more than the local natives do. Even training him in jungle survival, a sort of Bomba Junior. Of course once Elena Verdugo happened on the scene I would think he'd want to make friends with her. She looks like she wants to with him real bad. In the previous film in the series Lita Baron in a similar role was a whole lot less subtle and I'm betting Monogram Pictures probably got mail on that from parents.For a kid supposedly Bomba's protégé, young Ivo acts really dumb some times. Bomba rescues him once and the kid's actions get him captured again.Not one of the better Bombas.