Sunday, August 7, 2011

Jana of the Jungle



Jana of the Jungle was, in my opinion, one of the rare cases of Saturday Morning injustice. Most of the better shows, like Filmation’s Tarzan and Flash Gordon series, as well as Jana’s companion series Godzilla, not ot mention Land of the Lost, did well with veiwers. Jana was an accomplished adventure series, featuring a female tarzan. These stories were set in the Brazilian rainforest of South America, seemingly HB’s favorite continent, as so many of the Johnny Quest stories took place there. Jana was abandoned in the Amazon Jungle when her father’s boat, the Amazon Queen crashed (it was never revealed what became of her missing father; she spent the series searching for him). She was rasied by Montaro, the last survivor of an ancient warrior tribe of Indians. Her friends included Teeko, a small yapok, or water possum, her white jaguar Ghost, whom she rescued form a poacher’s trap as a cub, and Ben Cooper, a wildlife biologist.









Some stories had an environmental theme, and featured poachers, land developers or treasure-seekers invading the Amazon. Others were very much of the “lost race” genre common to ERB and 30s pulps novels, and featured hidden civilization deep in the jungle vastness, including Indian cities of gold, a lost Mayan colony, a fierce tribe of blond women warriors, who gave the Amazon river its mane, and a tribe of giant beast-men. Jana first aired in 1978, as half of the adventure themed The Godzilla Power Hour. The first half starred Toho movie productions famous monster, in new adventures where he saved the wolrd repeatedly from various mutant menaces. About mid-season, the show expanded into the ninety minute Godzilla Super 90 as original Johnny Quest episodes were added. Godzilla survived the season, and new episodes were aired the following one, but Jana did not. Later, Godzilla was paired in an hour long show with the Super Globe Trotters, and for the following season with Honk reruns of Kong Phooey and Dynomutt. None of these combinations went as well with the Godzilla series as either the Jana episodes or the JQ reruns. It is not entirely clear why Jana herself flopped. It may have been because adventure shows like this one were mored aimed toward boys, and boys could not identify well with a female protagonists. Girls simply may not have been interested. Thus, the show missed both its audiences. I have written a fanfcic on Jana of the Jungle, which you can find below.
VALE OF LOST MEN

http://www.angelfire.com/tv2/buford/vale.htm

Cut and paste this link.
In the story Jana and her friends discover a lost colony pf phoenicians. And yes, the explorer's missing son, Todd, is supposed to be Dino Boy. I'd planned a sequal where they venture into the Lost Valley and cross over with Dino Boy and Ugg. I was going to have Ugg's backstory in which he was banished form his own tribe of Neanderthals for a crime he didn't commit. Unfortunately, I haven't had tiem to write it.

The original page may be found here:

http://www.angelfire.com/tv2/buford/Jana.htm

4 comments:

  1. Jana's father's boat was named the "Princess Jana," rather than the "Amazon Queen." This may be verified from YouTube postings of the Jana opening, which exist in several languages. The "Amazon Queen" boat appeared in an episode of Jonny Quest, probably "Pursuit of the Po-Ho." Both Jana and Jonny were created and designed by the same artist, Doug Wildey.

    ReplyDelete
  2. I believe the JQ episode is "Turu the Terrible," with the boat's captain yelling "You blasted gooney-bird!" every time the pterodactyl rips off a chunk of his vessel.

    For my own fantasy stories I came up with a species of telepathic weasel/ opossum creatures, the Garithi. Unfortunately, out of 20 published stories, only 2 are set in my elaborate fantasy universe, and neither involves a Garith. Anyway, Teeko is pretty much the original Garith -- and up until a few months ago, I had no idea he was based on a real animal!

    ReplyDelete
  3. See how inspirational crtoons cn be?

    ReplyDelete