![Jungle quicksand women](https://kumkoniak.com/62.jpg)
The similarity between her name and Sheena's is entirely coincidental, of course. Definitely Sheena, Queen of the Jungle herself.Eventually, she meets Ashitaka, whom as an Emishi facing the encroachment of the Yamato has some understanding what the spirits are going through, and forms a difficult but sincere friendship with him. San grows up to be one of the spirits' fiercest warriors against the encroachment of human settlements. Their cowardice disgusted the spirits so that they took in San to raise as their own. Princess Mononoke: As a baby, San was given to the forest spirits by her parents in return for their own lives.
![jungle quicksand women jungle quicksand women](http://i.ytimg.com/vi/RnpHFCjfJNA/0.jpg)
She has little trouble reintegrating into human society, but she retains the mind-boggling strength and agility she developed in the wild. Sapphire Birch, Pokémon Adventures' take on the female avatar from the third game, takes her role as Pokémon trainer and researcher so seriously she actually went native, wearing clothes made from leaves and moss and growing her fingernails into claws.Onegai My Melody: Mana's favorite movie, Beauty and the Beast in a Jungle, follows this trope and Kuromi's nightmare magic inserts her into the main character role.
![jungle quicksand women jungle quicksand women](https://i.pinimg.com/originals/c3/f5/a7/c3f5a77ee67b0b0a1b9c2f15d4f8efa0.png)
Magical Princess Minky Momo: Momo transforms into one in the episode "Lord of the Jungle".In her backstory, it's revealed that she actually comes from a rich family in the city and moved to the Jungle at age 14 due to getting kicked out of her family for getting pregnant. She can hunt however and does wear a Fur Bikini. Weda from Haré+Guu, has this appearance but the Jungle society she lives is fairly civilized and not totally disconnected from the Outside world (there are still buses to the city, for example).Cutey Honey: This is one of Honey's transformations in episode 20.The trope itself is older than that, though, with possibly the first example being Rima from W.
![jungle quicksand women jungle quicksand women](https://pbs.twimg.com/media/BxqY54lIEAALeLu.jpg)
![jungle quicksand women jungle quicksand women](https://i.ytimg.com/vi/SOt3hrtFBok/hqdefault.jpg)
The trope name ultimately dates to a 1920 silent film serial called The Jungle Princess, but its common usage probably dates from the 1936 film of the same name starring Dorothy Lamour. In science fiction, many a Green-Skinned Space Babe is just a jungle princess with a dye job and a ray gun. While the movie version of the Jungle Princess will let her explorer bring her back to his home and 'civilize' her, the TV version will insist on staying in the jungle, and so our hero will settle down in a nice treehouse and steal kisses from her when she's not busy ordering her lions to savage the occasional poacher. She will find him in the clutch of some local danger (being menaced by her tame leopard is always fun if it's a romantic comedy), rescue him, and romance will ensue. Inevitably she will be single when she first encounters a hunky American or European explorer.
![Jungle quicksand women](https://kumkoniak.com/62.jpg)