Tarzan+x+shame+of+jane+exclusive <2025>

In an exclusive interview with Ron Jeremy, we discussed the making of "Tarzan X: Shame of Jane" and its lasting impact on the adult film industry.

I've always been a fan of the Tarzan character, and I wanted to create a parody that would poke fun at the classic story. I came up with the idea for "Tarzan X: Shame of Jane" as a way to combine my love of Tarzan with my passion for adult entertainment. tarzan+x+shame+of+jane+exclusive

But not all were burned. Our source, a former lab technician who wishes to remain anonymous, kept a single workprint. “It’s not arousing,” he told us. “It’s the scariest movie I’ve ever seen. The shame of Jane is our shame. That’s why it had to die.” In an exclusive interview with Ron Jeremy, we

The "shame" in the title refers to the transgression of social taboos. The film posits that Jane’s movement from the civilized world to the jungle is not just a physical journey, but a psychological stripping away of societal mores. However, the film operates within the confines of the "male gaze." Jane’s initial hesitation and eventual submission to Tarzan (Rocco Siffredi) are filmed with a voyeuristic intensity. The "shame" is performative; it is a mechanism that allows the character to explore "deviant" (by civilized standards) sexuality while the audience is invited to watch her cross that threshold. The narrative arc suggests that in the jungle, the concept of shame is rendered obsolete by the natural order, yet it remains the primary source of dramatic tension for the viewer. But not all were burned

This film is a notable entry in the genre of "cinema erotico" and adult adventure films that were popular in Italian production circles during the late 1980s and 1990s. Unlike Disney’s animated counterpart released a few years later, D'Amato’s film leans into the inherent sexuality of Edgar Rice Burroughs’ original "primitive" concepts.