In the end, Tarzanx Shame of Jane (1995) is less a concrete object than a moodboard for the in-between: a half-remembered soundtrack, a poster taped to a dorm-room wall, a story told over cheap beer in a room that smells of incense and radiator heat. It asks us to celebrate the imperfect artifacts that shaped a generation’s interior life, to honor the strange collisions where myth met the messy human heart, and to recognize that sometimes the most compelling art is the kind that won’t — and shouldn’t — be fully explained.