If you're looking for information on Tarzan films or stories, I can suggest some options:
The film loosely (very loosely) follows Edgar Rice Burroughs’ classic. Rocco plays Tarzan, raised by apes in the jungle. Enter Jane (played by Rocco’s real-life wife, Rosa Caracciolo), a prim and proper Englishwoman who gets lost during an expedition. One look at Rocco’s chiseled, loincloth-clad physique, and civilization goes out the window. The film attempts to hit the same beats as the Disney renaissance era (this came out during the 90s Tarzan craze), but instead of Phil Collins songs, you get… well, Rocco’s signature grunts. tarzan rocco
Let’s be clear: Tarzan X is not a movie you watch for plot coherence or award-winning dialogue. You watch it for the sheer, jaw-dropping spectacle of seeing Rocco Siffredi—the legendary, hyper-intense adult star—grunt his way through a loincloth, swinging on vines with the subtlety of a wrecking ball. If you're looking for information on Tarzan films
The association between "Tarzan" and "Rocco" remains a significant part of Siffredi’s legacy. It represents an era where adult films attempted to mimic Hollywood's epic storytelling, using legendary literary characters as a backdrop for adult content. Today, the term is frequently searched by fans of "vintage" or high-production adult cinema from the golden age of European adult film production. One look at Rocco’s chiseled, loincloth-clad physique, and
Fans of so-bad-it’s-good cinema, Rocco completists, and anyone who has ever wondered what it would look like if the Lord of the Jungle had zero indoor voice.
The character appeared primarily in a trilogy of films, all starring the American bodybuilder (sometimes credited as Dick Lloyd).
Here is a useful piece on the character, the films, and their place in cinema history.