Shame Of Jane -1994- Hindi Dubbed Repack | Tarzan X

The ending is the same story‑wise, but the Hindi dub adds a voice‑over moral (“Jungle ki suraksha ham sab ki zimmedari hai”) that isn’t present in the original.

The plot loosely follows the classic Edgar Rice Burroughs mythology, focusing on the arrival of Jane and her expedition into the deep jungle, where they encounter the wild Tarzan. Joe D'Amato, a prolific Italian filmmaker known for balancing mainstream horror and exploitation films, utilized professional lighting and framing that set it apart from low-budget American counterparts. Technical and Legal Realities

| Item | Details | |------|----------| | | Tarzan X Shame of Jane (often shortened to Tarzan X or Shame of Jane ) | | Original Release | 1994 (English‑language B‑movie) | | Hindi Dub | 1995–1996 (television and home‑video circuit) | | Genre | Action‑Adventure / Jungle Thriller | | Runtime | ~92 minutes (dubbed cut) | | Director | Michael Miller (credited as “Mike Miller”) | | Producer | Global Action Pictures (U.S.) | | Hindi Voice Director | Raj Kumar Saxena (renowned dubbing‑studio “Saxena Audio Labs”) | | Notable Cast (original) | John Carter (“Tarzan”), Lisa Hart (“Jane”), Victor Bennett (“Shame”) | | Hindi Voice Cast | Ranjeet Kumar (Tarzan), Seema Mishra (Jane), Vinod Kumar (Shame) | | Music (dubbed) | Background score retained; Hindi title track “Jungle Ka Jashn” composed by B. Singh. | Tarzan X Shame of Jane -1994- Hindi Dubbed

This article dives deep into the film’s origin, its plot (such as it is), the unique appeal of the Hindi dub, and why this 1994 oddity remains a search magnet for collectors and curious cinephiles.

Retro cinema forums and peer-to-peer networks where collectors preserve 90s VCD culture. The Legacy of 90s VCD Culture The ending is the same story‑wise, but the

Jane, a sophisticated English woman, accompanies a professor on an expedition into the African jungle searching for a lost city. Left behind at camp, she stumbles into a trap set by a mysterious, feral man and is knocked unconscious. The man, later named John, is Tarzan. He carries the unconscious Jane to his home. Initially, Jane tries to civilize him, teaching him about society, but their relationship quickly develops into a passionate, physical romance. When they return to civilization, the "shame" of the title reveals itself as Jane must navigate her fiancé's jealousy and Tarzan's uncivilized behavior, all while maintaining her own desires.

Let’s be honest: by any objective standard, Tarzan X is a bad film. The special effects consist of stock footage of lions cut with shots of a very calm, confused-looking dog in a mane. The jungle set clearly has a studio floor, and the "dangerous" tribal warriors look like bodybuilders who forgot their gym membership fees. Technical and Legal Realities | Item | Details

The film's plot revolves around Tarzan (played by David Giancola), a jungle-dwelling hero who finds himself entangled in a web of lust, deception, and murder. The "Shame of Jane" refers to the titular character, Jane (played by Kathleen Turner), a beautiful and mysterious woman who becomes the object of desire for Tarzan. As the story unfolds, it becomes clear that nothing is as it seems, and the film descends into a world of slapstick humor, sexploitation, and Tarzan-esque hijinks.