One Million Years B.C.
One Million Years B.C.

One Million Years B.C. (1966)

6.1 ? Nov 24, 1966 1h 40m

Overview

As the Earth wrestles with its agonizing birth, the peoples of this barren and desolate world struggle to survive. Driven by animal instinct they compete against the harsh conditions, their giant predators, and warring tribes. When two people from opposing clans fall in love, existing conventions are shattered forever as each tribe struggles for supremacy and Man embarks on his tortuous voyage of civilization.

Genres

Adventure Fantasy

Release Date

November 24, 1966

Rating

6.1 /10

Runtime

1h 40m

Official Trailer from YouTube

Raquel Welch

Raquel Welch

Loana

John Richardson

John Richardson

Tumak

Percy Herbert

Percy Herbert

Sakana

Robert Brown

Robert Brown

Akhoba

Martine Beswick

Martine Beswick

Nupondi

Jean Wladon

Jean Wladon

Ahot

Lisa Thomas

Lisa Thomas

Sura

Yvonne Horner

Yvonne Horner

Ullah

Malya Nappi

Tohana

William Lyon Brown

Payto

Richard James

Young Rock Man

Frank Hayden

1st Rock Man

Terence Maidment

1st Shell Man

Micky De Rauch

1st Shell Girl

David Kossoff

David Kossoff

Narrator (uncredited)

Heraclio Niz Mesa

Caveman (uncredited)

James Payne

One of the Cave People (uncredited)

Vic Perrin

Vic Perrin

Narrator (uncredited)

Dido Plumb

Dido Plumb

Caveman (uncredited)

Nikki Van der Zyl

Nikki Van der Zyl

Loana (voice) (uncredited)

John Chard avatar

John Chard

7.0/10

Apr 06, 2016

What say you fuzzy britches? For their 100th release, Hammer Films remade the 1940 cavemen groaner One Million B.C. It would prove to be a roaring box office success, whilst simultaneously making Raquel Welch an iconic poster girl and Ray Harryhausen an even bigger hero. Plot is slight. Two tribes exist in prehistoric times, the Rock People and the Shell People. The former are more aggressive and basic, the latter more forward and assured. Tumak (John Richardson) of the Rocks and Loana (Welch) wind up together, fighting prejudices and lots of giant beasties! Hooray! That's really it, the message is clear but ultimately we are here for the dinosaurs and giant creatures (well OK, the scantily clad cave dwellers as well), with Harryhausen once again showing why he was a legend in his field of animation. With good fights, a bit of sexy sizzle and a volcanic finale, it's all good really. It's no history lesson of course, but as Harryhausen was wont to say, they wasn't making a film for history professors! 7/10

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CinemaSerf avatar

CinemaSerf

5.0/10

Sep 24, 2022

After a bit of a contretemps, "Tumak" (John Richardson) is kicked out of his prehistoric tribe and left to fend for himself. Fortunately, after a few near misses with some larger-than-life creatures, he encounters "Loana" (Raquel Welch) who lives with her people by the seaside. Not everyone likes him though - not least "Payto" (William Lyon Brown) who has eyes on the prize for himself. The plot, the acting, the dialogue - well, who cares? That's all drivel from start to finish. What rescues it entirely from the cutting room floor (where much of this belongs) are the visual effects from the master Ray Harryhausen. Stop motion at it's best - dinosaurs and pterodactyls that, even if they are made of polystyrene and/or papier-mâché easily out-perform the entire human cast. Raquel Welch is just an ichthyolite out of water and the usually more respectable Robert Brown looks faintly ridiculous in his best furs as "Akhoba". The ending comes not a moment too soon, but sadly doesn't really features the stars of this film - the dinosaurs!

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