Director: Hal Roach•Genres: Adventure, Fantasy, Prehistoric
In the prehistoric era, a young caveman named Tumak is exiled from his tribe for challenging the chief. He eventually finds refuge with a gentler tribe, where he falls in love with a woman named Loana. Tumak must then lead his new tribe against a rival tribe and prehistoric beasts to ensure their survival.
While visually groundbreaking for its time with innovative special effects and stop-motion animation, "One Million B.C." was largely panned by critics for its weak script, anachronisms, and reliance on dramatic reconstructions. However, its ambitious scope and visual spectacle made it a popular, albeit controversial, film with audiences.
Praised for its ambitious special effects and prehistoric setting.
Criticized for its thin plot and historical inaccuracies.
Considered a visual spectacle but lacking narrative substance.
Google audience: Audience reception is difficult to gauge with modern metrics, but its enduring presence suggests a fascination with its prehistoric theme and visual ambition.
The film famously reused and repurposed stop-motion dinosaur footage from earlier silent films, most notably "The Lost World" (1925) and "King Kong" (1933), to create its prehistoric bestiary.
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