Advertisement
Bomba and the Jungle Girl backdrop
Bomba and the Jungle Girl

Bomba and the Jungle Girl

Savage darts and white man's bullets split the Congo...in frenzied search for monster-guarded secrets!

5.2 / 1019521h 10m

Synopsis

Bomba decides to find out who his parents were. He starts with Cody Casson's diary and follows the trail to a native village. An ancient blind woman tells him his parents and the village's true ruler were murdered by the current chieftain and his daughter.

Genre: Action, Adventure, Thriller

Status: Released

Director: Ford Beebe

Website:

Main Cast

Johnny Sheffield

Johnny Sheffield

Bomba

Karen Sharpe

Karen Sharpe

Linda Ward

Walter Sande

Walter Sande

Mr. Ward

Suzette Harbin

Suzette Harbin

Princess Baru

Martin Wilkins

Martin Wilkins

Gamboso the Usurper

Morris Buchanan

Morris Buchanan

Chief Kokoli

Leonard Mudie

Leonard Mudie

Commissioner Andy Barnes

Don Blackman

Don Blackman

Umgala

Amanda Randolph

Amanda Randolph

Linasi

Roy Glenn

Roy Glenn

Kaje

User Reviews

CinemaSerf

"Bomba" (Johnny Sheffield) makes quite an horrific discovery one morning when his visit to a cave reveals some long-dead corpses. He decides that a decent burial ought to be in order and so sets out to discover a little more about them. The local village seems a good place to start, but he comes up against a bit of a bamboo-wall of silence. Meantime, the visiting "Ward" family - dad and daughter (as usual) - might be able to help and rue to form he and the young "Linda" (Karen Sharpe) start to get along nicely. It's only when he finds a tribesman who confides the real reason for the obfuscation that the young man and his new friends must face a difficult truth. Insofar as it goes, this is quite a menacing little tale that quite effectively uses the (studio) jungle scenario to tell a story of wickedness, murder and duplicity - and in his usually flighty fashion, the young Sheffield carries it off fine. Sure, just about every expense has been spared with the production but he works well with the visiting Sharpe and though it takes a long-outdated perspective of tribal and superstitious life in Africa, it has just about enough action to pass an hour effortlessly enough.