The Jungle’s Darkest Secret: A Wild Look Back at ‘Tarzan X: Shame of Jane – Part 2’
For fans of “so bad it’s brilliant” cinema, this is the Holy Grail. The acting is wooden enough to build a treehouse. The dubbing is hilariously out of sync (one character’s lips keep moving for a full 5 seconds after the dialogue stops). And the musical score is just a Casio keyboard set to “suspenseful bongo.” Tarzan X Shame Of Jane Part 2
In a world of polished blockbusters, Tarzan X: Shame of Jane – Part 2 stands as a sweaty, glorious mess. It’s a reminder that the jungle isn’t just a place of danger—it’s a place where good taste goes to die, swinging on a vine and wearing nothing but a smirk. The Jungle’s Darkest Secret: A Wild Look Back
Forget the polite, grammatically perfect Lord of the Apes. This Tarzan (played with grunting intensity by Rocco Siffredi—yes, that Rocco Siffredi) is all primal instinct and very little loincloth. By Part 2, the plot has become as tangled as the jungle itself. After the events of the first film, Tarzan is grappling with his dual identity: civilized man versus wild beast. But “civilized” is a loose term here. And the musical score is just a Casio