: Unlike the Hays Code-era films which used limited nudity for artistic effect, Tarzan-X is explicitly classified as an exploitation film.
Yet, as a subject of analysis within , it is invaluable. It reveals the 1990s’ anxiety about sexuality—the fear and fascination with “uncontrollable” desire. It shows how public domain characters (Tarzan entered the public domain in pieces, with the 1912 novel becoming free in the US by 2019, though the estate still fights it) become playgrounds for low-budget auteurs. Most importantly, it asks a question that mainstream Hollywood has never dared to answer: What if the love story of Tarzan and Jane was told without the fig leaf? Xxx Tarzan-X Shame Of Jane- Rocco Siffredi E Ro...
Interestingly, while the title uses the name "Tarzan," the characters in the movie only refer to him as "Ape-Man". : Unlike the Hays Code-era films which used