An iconic Italian actress who plays a key role, though her presence is primarily for exotic aesthetic appeal rather than a deep narrative. Zenza Raggi: Appearing as Karim. Additional Cast: Amanda Steel (as Mora), John Walton (as Abdul), and The "Sequel" Confusion The marketing of this film as a sequel to Queen of Elephants
The story follows Jenny Mallory (played by Selen ), a young woman who grew up wild among elephants in Africa after a childhood tragedy. She is eventually "rescued" by her aristocratic relatives and brought back to a cold, Victorian-style life in Scotland, where she struggles to adapt to the constraints of civilization. Joe D-Amato - Queen Of Elephants 2- Sahara -19...
. Despite its marketing as a sequel, critics and film databases note a few key incongruities: Thematic Divergence An iconic Italian actress who plays a key
For fans of Joe D’Amato’s filmography, these titles represent his final era: a mix of farcical dialogue, library sound effects, and surprising bursts of cinematic beauty. While the "elephants" may be missing from the second half of the double feature, the director's ability to turn a simple adult production into a strange, atmospheric travelogue remains his most unique trait. Sahara (Video 1998) She is eventually "rescued" by her aristocratic relatives
Zara must navigate shifting allegiances: she teams with a disillusioned European documentary photographer (Matteo), an ex-mercenary turned desert guide (Rashid), and a young local scientist (Leila) whose research into paleoclimates could change everything. The corporate antagonist, Viktor Kall, uses money, mercenaries, and advanced tracking drones to push deeper into outlawed territories, while a mysterious religious sect believes the subterranean site is a gateway to a prophetic apocalypse. As sandstorms swirl and technology fails, human passions — greed, lust, loyalty, and revenge — collide with the primeval intelligence of the landscape and the elephants who sense danger to their own ancestral paths.
In the sweltering expanse of the 1930s Sahara, —the legendary "Queen of Elephants"—found herself far from the lush jungles of her birthright. Clad in tattered khaki and a relic of a pith helmet, she led a rhythmic caravan of five massive African elephants across the burning dunes of the Grand Erg Oriental. She wasn't searching for water, but for the Lost Oasis of Zarzura
By the mid-to-late 1990s, Italian filmmaker Joe D'Amato had cemented his reputation as one of the most prolific and fearless directors in European exploitation cinema. From gruesome horror ( Anthropophagus ) to post-apocalyptic action ( Endgame ), from hardcore pornography ( Erotic Dreams ) to historical erotica ( The Convent of Sinners ), D'Amato – born Aristide Massaccesi – rarely paused for breath. By the end of the 1990s, he was focusing heavily on exotic erotic features shot in and around Rome, often using standing sets, Sahara-like dunes, and Eastern costumes bought from theatrical warehouses.