Frank Buck tangles with Nazis who have been doping tigers in Malaya, thereby making man-eaters of them. With the cats on a rampage, rubber production is seriously curtailed and the Allied war effort jeopardized. Buck and his associates, Peter Jeremy, Geoffrey MacCardle and Linda McCardle, thwart the Teutonic malefactors: the villainous Nazi Dr. Lang (Arno Frey) and his portly accomplice Henry Gratz. Thereafter, life is safe once again in the jungle.
“Juves should find this Frank Buck actioner exciting. It's a fiction piece, and not the usual jungle travelogue…June Duprez is as attractive a biologist as one could hope to meet up with in the middle of the jungle.”[1]
“The animal shots are eye-filling, as usual, and especially well photographed…They're
convincing enough…to keep the younger generation glued to movie house seats. Sam Newfield directed with a good sense of melodramatic action, and it is Mr. Buck himself who gives the stand-out performance. The jungle fellow is a right natural actor.”[2]
Gallery
Promotional photo for Tiger Fangs, showing Arno Frey (left) and Pedro Regas (right)
Left to right: MacDonald, Frey, Banks, and Buck in the film
Still from Tiger Fangs, with Buck and Duprez at center
Renaldo (left) and Buck in the film
Promotional photo featuring Dan Seymour (left) and Pedro Regas