Jane Is Jane Forever

Summary This film is about an old lady called Jane, who believes she is Tarzan's widow. She wears a leopard skin bathing suit under her black coat when she visits the zoo to talk to the animals, and keeps African mementos in her home. She also has pictures of famous screen incarnations of Tarzan, including Johnny Weissmuller, Lex Barker, etc. up on the walls of her flat, and longs to 'return' to Africa and visit 'Tarzan's tomb'. View more details

Jane Is Jane Forever

Directed : Walter Bockmayer Rolf Bührmann

Written : Walter Bockmayer Rolf Bührmann

Stars : Peter Chatel Johanna König Karl Blömer Evelyn Hall

6.9

Details

Genres : Comedy Drama

Release date : Jan 27, 1980

Countries of origin : West Germany

Language : German

Filming locations : Cologne, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany

Production companies : Zweites Deutsches Fernsehen (ZDF) Entenproduktion

Summary This film is about an old lady called Jane, who believes she is Tarzan's widow. She wears a leopard skin bathing suit under her black coat when she visits the zoo to talk to the animals, and keeps African mementos in her home. She also has pictures of famous screen incarnations of Tarzan, including Johnny Weissmuller, Lex Barker, etc. up on the walls of her flat, and longs to 'return' to Africa and visit 'Tarzan's tomb'. View more details

Details

Genres : Comedy Drama

Release date : Jan 27, 1980

Countries of origin : West Germany

Language : German

Filming locations : Cologne, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany

Production companies : Zweites Deutsches Fernsehen (ZDF) Entenproduktion

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Sadie Goes to Heaven

Sadie Goes to Heaven

Little six-year-old Sadie O'Malley, a child of the tenement district, has a vision of heaven awakened within her by the teaching of a settlement worker, so when she sees a handsome limousine in front of the settlement laundry near her home she thinks it is a heavenly chariot, climbs into a clothes hamper in the interior of the car and is whisked away to the home of Mrs. Welland Riche. The latter has left earlier in the day on a trip, so when Sadie and. her dog, George Washington Square, who has been her companion in the hamper trip, are dumped down the clothes chute of the Riche home while concealed in the basket, they find easy access to the upper regions of the mansion and then, indeed, Sadie thinks she is in heaven. Sadie soon is discovered by the servants, but they believe she is just another of Mrs. Riche's fads when she tells them she is there to stay. Believing Mrs. Riche as desiring that the best of care be given the child, Sadie is dressed in rich garments and is much at home until Mrs. Riche returns. While the servants' explanations have been made, Mrs. Riche, in the meantime having been won over by the child's beauty and sweet manners, decides Sadie may remain. But the tenement child's happiness is short-lived when George Washington Square appears upon the scene. Mrs. Riche orders that the pup be removed and tells Sadie that, instead, she can play with the Riche collection of Poms. Not so for Sadie. She informs the wealthy matron that she wouldn't give up George Washington Square for all the heavens and that if G.W.S. cannot remain she will go. So hugging her doggie close to her she returns to her worried mother with the explanation, "I have been to heaven, but they sent me home because they didn't like my dog."

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