6/10
Bomba: For the Love of Ivory
6 September 2020
ELEPHANT STAMPEDE (Monogram, 1951), with screenplay and direction by Ford Beebe, marks the sixth entry to the "Bomba, the Jungle Boy" adventure series starring Johnny Sheffield. In one of the better entries, cast change includes Leonard Mudie for Charles Irwin in the role of Bomba's friend, Deputy Commissioner Andy Barnes. As with the earlier segments, there is a young girl about Bomba's age who becomes more interested in him while Bomba's interest is on other things.

The plot development is introduced in three segments before leading to an entire whole: 1) As the camera tracks around the jungle setting, capturing the presence of elephants and other animals starting their day. Bomba (Johnny Sheffield) is seen riding one of the elephants while a hawk rests on his arm. The hawk flies to a tree branch where Bomba senses danger as he sees a snake approaching the bird, where Bomba gets off elephant and saves the day. 2) Lola (Donna Martell), a native girl, is seen ringing the bell for native tribe to enter cottage school of Miss Banks (Edith Evanson) where the missionary teacher gives lessons about the alphabet. During that time, Lola goes to Bomba where they meet at a secret place near the lake where she teaches him letters and how to read . 3) Mark Phillips (Guy Kingsford) is an authorized hunter, accompanied by Bob Warren (John Kellogg) and Joe Collins (Myron Healey). Because Collins has illegally shot and killed an elephant for its ivory, Phillips places him under arrest, but accidentally shoots Phillips during a struggle with the gun. Placing the body under some branches, Warren takes his credentials and assumes the identity of Phillips so they can hunt for ivory. As Andy Barnes (Leonard Mudie) meets and takes Collins and "Phillips," to the village to meet with Miss Banks, she secretly tells Barnes she suspects the men are not what they appear to be, considering the fact that she knows Mark Phillips, and the man pretending to be him has a "W" label on his buckle. As Andy heads back to the station to check up on these men by telegram, he asks Bomba to watch over these men and not to do anything until he returns. Later, Warren and Collins discover Bomba has discovered the body of Phillips, with intentions of killing him before tricking the native chief Nagala (Martin WIlkins) into revealing the secret cave where the cache of ivory is stored.

Pretty good "Bomba" adventure that presents Donna Martell teaching Bomba how to read and spell, though her notions are more on the romantic side than his lessons. To make him jealous, she joins forces with the ivory hunters, unaware that they are using her for their personal gain. Of the villains, John Kellogg, whose physical mannerisms comes as a reminded to character actor, Douglas Fowley, stands out through his vicious presence showing no remorse for his evil actions. Moving in episodic manner like a chapter serial with enough material for its 71 minutes, the movie title eventually comes to full swing late into the story.

Commonly shown on broadcast television during the 1960s and 1970s on morning or afternoons for the juvenile viewers, ELEPHANT STAMPEDE and other Bomba adventures can presently be seen on Turner Classic Movies (TCM premiere: January 6, 2012). Next in the series: AFRICAN TREASURE (1952) (**)
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