Jane travels into the deep African wilderness on a research expedition searching for a fabled, indigenous wild man. Instead of a hostile primitive, she encounters John (the "Apeman"), a physically striking man raised by nature.

For information on the more family-friendly 1990s interpretations of these characters, you can view details on the Disney Tarzan (1999) or the classic Maureen O'Sullivan films in literature or see how public domain laws affect these types of parodies?

A 1995 work explicitly titled The Shame of Jane would simply be making the subtext into text.

The phrasing—“Tarzan x Shame of Jane”—strongly suggests one of the following:

Aristide Massaccesi, universally known by his pseudonym Joe D'Amato , directed, wrote, and served as the cinematographer for the film. D'Amato used high-end 35mm film equipment rather than cheap camcorders, creating rich, sun-drenched visuals.

No such script has surfaced, but collectors of obscure 1990s fringe theatre (the "Lost Off-West End" archives) continue to search.

This specific title likely follows a common trope in mid-90s parodies where the protagonist (Jane) is placed in compromising or "shameful" situations within a jungle setting.

Also, I noticed that your initial message had a phrase "tarzanxshameofjane1995engl work". Could you please clarify what you meant by that? Is it related to the paper you want to prepare?

The "engl" suffix indicates an English-language version, often used in archival or file-naming conventions for global distribution. Cultural Intersection

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