“Jane.” TV-MA, for violence, adult content and adult language. The atmosphere of support for JANE opened its eyes, showing the possibility of creating a world where everyone, regardless of social status, could be seen and heard. But what really resonates are the memories of women who help women by speaking openly about specific economic and health issues that the male-dominated establishment usually ignores. “The Janes” is filled with alternately painful and gloomily funny anecdotes, covering everything from cards that capture the relevant details of patients, to the legend of an amateur adept who pretended to be a licensed professional. The timely documentary The Janes, co-directed by Tia Lessin and Emma Pildes, tells the story of a group that advertised in counterculture periodicals and on bulletin boards in hippie parties, advising women in need to “call Jane.” Surviving, now-aged members of Jane tell the filmmakers about how they got together, how their law-abiding process worked, and why what they did matters. The organization disintegrated when their services were no longer needed, but the connections they created helped lay the groundwork for the feminist movement of the 1970s. Since the late 1960s, an underground network from Chicago has tried to connect women with real doctors, charging everything patients could afford. Wade’s Supreme Court paved the way for legal abortions across the United States, many American women had to resort to paying huge sums of money to beaten criminals for quasi-medical procedures that could be life-threatening.