


Tarzan & Jane


Tarzan & Jane
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Watch-outs
What this film brings
Content barometer
Violence
2/5
Moderate
Fear
2/5
A few scenes
Sexuality
1/5
Allusions
Language
0/5
None
Narrative complexity
0/5
Simple
Adult themes
0/5
None
Expert review
This Disney animated sequel uses a memory based structure, with a light family adventure tone focused on Tarzan and Jane's first year together in the jungle. The main sensitive material comes from repeated peril, including panther attacks, a volcano eruption, betrayal by greedy adults, a kidnapping, and several chase scenes that may unsettle very young viewers. The intensity stays moderate because the action is highly stylized, the tense scenes are separated by calmer comic moments, and the supporting characters keep the overall mood reassuring. There is no meaningful sexual content and almost no strong language, which makes the film broadly accessible for children who already enjoy animated adventure stories. For parents, the main consideration is whether a child is sensitive to threatening animals, sudden danger, or moments when Jane appears frightened or trapped. Around age 6, many children are likely to enjoy it well, especially with an adult nearby to frame the danger as brief and cartoon like.
Synopsis
With the first anniversary of her wedding to Tarzan beckoning, Jane ponders how to make it the perfect English celebration.
Difficult scenes
In one flashback involving Jane's English friends, a picnic goes wrong when two panthers attack the group. The characters have to run deeper into the jungle and later face another ambush, creating several minutes of animal threat, pursuit, and visible fear. In another episode, Tarzan leads two men to a diamond mine inside a volcano because he hopes to get Jane a gift. The men betray him, and the eruption traps several characters in a dangerous setting with lava, falls, and urgent escape, which can feel intense for younger children. An old friend of Jane is revealed to have harmful motives and comes to recover a hidden object, leading to Jane being kidnapped. This sequence may stand out for children because it combines deception, capture, and a rescue chase, even though the overall treatment remains firmly family adventure rather than realistic suspense.
Where to watch
No verified platform for the US market yet. We keep this section updated as availability changes.
About this title
- Format
- Feature film
- Year
- 2002
- Runtime
- 1h 12m
- Countries
- United States of America
- Original language
- PT
- Directed by
- Victor Cook, Steve Loter, Don MacKinnon, Lisa Schaffer
- Main cast
- Michael T. Weiss, Olivia D'Abo, Jeff Bennett, Jim Cummings, April Winchell, René Auberjonois, Grey DeLisle, Alexis Denisof, John O'Hurley, Phil Proctor
- Studios
- Disney Television Animation
Content barometer
Violence
2/5
Moderate
Fear
2/5
A few scenes
Sexuality
1/5
Allusions
Language
0/5
None
Narrative complexity
0/5
Simple
Adult themes
0/5
None
Expert review
This Disney animated sequel uses a memory based structure, with a light family adventure tone focused on Tarzan and Jane's first year together in the jungle. The main sensitive material comes from repeated peril, including panther attacks, a volcano eruption, betrayal by greedy adults, a kidnapping, and several chase scenes that may unsettle very young viewers. The intensity stays moderate because the action is highly stylized, the tense scenes are separated by calmer comic moments, and the supporting characters keep the overall mood reassuring. There is no meaningful sexual content and almost no strong language, which makes the film broadly accessible for children who already enjoy animated adventure stories. For parents, the main consideration is whether a child is sensitive to threatening animals, sudden danger, or moments when Jane appears frightened or trapped. Around age 6, many children are likely to enjoy it well, especially with an adult nearby to frame the danger as brief and cartoon like.
Synopsis
With the first anniversary of her wedding to Tarzan beckoning, Jane ponders how to make it the perfect English celebration.
Difficult scenes
In one flashback involving Jane's English friends, a picnic goes wrong when two panthers attack the group. The characters have to run deeper into the jungle and later face another ambush, creating several minutes of animal threat, pursuit, and visible fear. In another episode, Tarzan leads two men to a diamond mine inside a volcano because he hopes to get Jane a gift. The men betray him, and the eruption traps several characters in a dangerous setting with lava, falls, and urgent escape, which can feel intense for younger children. An old friend of Jane is revealed to have harmful motives and comes to recover a hidden object, leading to Jane being kidnapped. This sequence may stand out for children because it combines deception, capture, and a rescue chase, even though the overall treatment remains firmly family adventure rather than realistic suspense.