-2024- Neonx Original - Lady Tarzan
The supporting cast includes veteran actor CCH Pounder as the ruthless Helix CEO (a character chillingly grounded in real-world deforestation data), and newcomer Jaylin Park as a disillusioned company hacker who becomes Kaya’s uneasy ally. Their chemistry crackles, especially in a mid-season chase through a floating garbage vortex—a sequence already being hailed as one of 2024’s most inventive set pieces.
★★★★☆ (4/5) Recommended if you like: Nausicaä of the Valley of the Wind , Dora and the Lost City of Gold (but darker), Love, Death & Robots (season 3’s “Jibaro”) Lady Tarzan – 2024 – A NeonX Original. All eight episodes streaming now.
Zara Montoya delivers a physically demanding, largely non-verbal performance that recalls Andy Serkis’s motion-capture work, but with raw, emotional transparency. Kaya’s arc is not about learning to be human—it’s about recognizing that humanity does not have a monopoly on intelligence or honor. In one wrenching scene, Kaya finds a recording of her late mother, a botanist, who whispers: “They will call you wild. That’s just their word for free.” Lady Tarzan -2024- NeonX Original
Created by showrunner Mira Chen (known for NeonX: Velocity ), Lady Tarzan introduces Kaya (breakout star Zara Montoya), a young woman raised in the depths of the Amazonian “Viridian Sector”—a genetically enhanced rainforest wired with bio-sensors and cloaked from satellite surveillance. Orphaned after a research expedition went dark, Kaya was adopted by a matriarchal troop of rare jaguar-faced monkeys. Unlike the classic Tarzan, who learns English to assimilate, Kaya speaks through a modified neural-linked drone companion, Echo, translating animal calls into data streams.
Lady Tarzan (streaming now on NeonX) is not a perfect show. Early episodes struggle with pacing, and Echo the drone can feel like a plot crutch. But when it swings—and it swings often—it achieves a rare alchemy: respecting a century-old myth while setting it ablaze. For viewers tired of grimdark superheroes and cynical reboots, Kaya offers something radical: a heroine who protects not a city, not a nation, but a living, breathing world that has no voice but hers. The supporting cast includes veteran actor CCH Pounder
Lady Tarzan lands at a moment when climate anxiety dominates young adult consciousness. But rather than preach, the show embeds its message in spectacle and suspense. Episodes frequently cut to real-world infographics in the end credits—this episode’s carbon offset failures, that animal’s extinction status—a subtle but powerful reminder that the fiction is barely ahead of the facts.
The twist? Kaya is not a feral outcast. She is the last known keeper of the “Mycelial Code”—a fungal neural network that records the memory of the jungle. When a ruthless agri-corp known as Helix Dynamics begins terraforming the Sector for synthetic bio-fuel, Kaya must decide: remain the jungle’s silent ghost, or become its warrior. All eight episodes streaming now
In the end, Lady Tarzan asks a provocative question: What if the “ape man” was a woman, and the jungle was not a place to escape, but the only home worth fighting for? That roar you hear is not a battle cry. It is the sound of an icon evolving.