Disney limited the Africans out of the movie, but brought them back in the TV series in the form of the fictional Waziri tribe that Tarzan and Jane befriend when colonial people opens a diamond mine on the tribe's land that pollutes the river. In a later episode, the tribe returns again when the chief's son is getting married in the tribe's own traditional way, but Jane manages to cause a rift between the tribe and Tarzan by teaching the betrothed that an arranged marriage is wrong and how she chose Tarzan for love (which is a bit bothering as an episode). But the series also ends up using the tribe and representing the locals sadly little even though it's more than in the movies.
@@mickeyology5180 there’s also an episode where the author of the books shows up and considering that he’s more focused on the violence of Tarzan at least in universe. The stories could be a Grimm version of what really happened. Also, a character who has a positive light in the box is a villain is also the episode, so that’s why he could be more positive in the book’s
14) el libro original de TARZAN de los monos de Edgar rice Burroughs 15) Jane Porter creció en la ciudad en su infancia suya Jane Porter transforma en una hermosa mujer al conocer a TARZAN en la jungla
Que Situacion de los padres de TARZAN John Clayton y Alice Clayton toda una verdadera pesadilla en una jungla tropical con una cabaña en medio de la selva