10,000 B.C. | 
| Director: Roland Emmerich Actors: Camilla Belle, Steven Strait, Cliff Curtis, Joel Virgel, Mo Zinal Studio: Warner Home Video Category: DVD
List Price: $28.98 Buy Used: $6.99 You Save: $21.99 (76%)
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Rating: 212 reviews Sales Rank: 250
Format: Closed-captioned, Color, Full Screen, Ntsc, Widescreen Languages: English (Original Language), English (Subtitled), French (Subtitled), Spanish (Subtitled), French (Dubbed), Spanish (Dubbed) Rating: PG-13 (Parental Guidance Suggested) Number Of Items: 1 Running Time: 109 Aspect Ratio: 2.35:1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 7.5 x 5.3 x 0.6
MPN: 1000023986 UPC: 085391139683 EAN: 0085391139683 ASIN: B0012Q732O
Theatrical Release Date: March 7, 2008 Release Date: June 24, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Product Description The filmmaker who launched a UFO invasion in Independence Day and unleashed the forces of global warming in The Day After Tomorrow now unveils a new day of adventure a time when mammoths shake the earth and mystical spirits shape human fates. Roland Emmerich directs 10000 BC the eye-filling tale of the first hero. That hero is young hunter D?Leh (Steven Strait) set out on a bold trek to rescue his kidnapped beloved (Camilla Belle) and fulfill his prophetic destiny. He?ll face an awesome saber-toothed tiger. Cross uncharted realms. Form an army. And uncover an advanced but corrupt Lost Civilization. There he will lead a fight for liberation ? and become the champion of the time when legend began.System Requirements:Running Time: 109 minutesFormat: DVD MOVIE Genre: ACTION/ADVENTURE/HEROES Rating: PG-13 UPC: 085391139683 Manufacturer No: 1000023986
Amazon.com To anyone who has ever yearned to see woolly mammoths in full stampede across the Alps, 10,000 BC can be heartily recommended. There's also a flock of "terror birds"--lethal ostriches on steroids--in a steaming jungle only a splice away from the heroes' snow-dusted alpine habitat. And lo, somewhere in the vastness of the North African desert lies a city whose slave inhabitants alternately teem like the crowds in Quo Vadis during the burning of Rome and trudge in hieratically menacing formations like the workers in Metropolis. That's pretty much it for the cool stuff. Setting movies in prehistoric times is dicey. Apart from the "Dawn of Man" sequence in 2001: A Space Odyssey, only Quest for Fire makes the grade, and its creators had the good sense to limit the dialogue to grunts and moans. 10,000 BC boasts a quasi-biblical narrator (Omar Sharif) and characters who speak in formed, albeit uninteresting, sentences--including a New Age-y "I understand your pain." But let no one say the storytelling isn't primitive. The narrator speaks of "the legend of the child with the blue eyes" and bingo, here's the kid now. When, grown up to be Camilla Belle, she's carried off by "four-legged demons"--guys on horseback to you--the neighbor boy (Steven Strait) who hankers to make myth with her leads a rescue mission into the great unknown world beyond their mountaintop. His name is D'Leh, which is Held, the German for "knight," spelled backward. So yes, there is some hidden meaning after all. 10,000 BC is the latest triumph of the ersatz from writer-director Roland Emmerich. Like Stargate (1994), Independence Day (1996), and The Day After Tomorrow (2004) before it, it's shamelessly cobbled together out of every movie Emmerich can remember to pilfer from (though to be fair, the section in pre-ancient Egypt harks back to his own Stargate). Emmerich's saving grace is that his films' cheesiness is so flagrant, his narratives so geared for instant gratification, he can seem like a kid simultaneously improvising and acting out a story in his backyard: "P'tend there's this alien ... p'tend maybe he came from Atlantis or something...." Just don't p'tend it has anything to do with real moviemaking. --Richard T. Jameson
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| Customer Reviews: Read 207 more reviews...
Hey, it's a fun movie, really. September 4, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
I just love to tag the idiots who think they're so smooth panning a movie because they're above it all. Get a life! If you wrote a review you must have seen, or heard others comment. It was good, clean fun, not action packed idiocy throughout - some just don't get that. The film is reminiscent of Gibsons 'Apocalypto', not much acting, but a story line that wasn't lost in the telling, and an ending worthy of good fantasy - three and a half stars.
Great Mythology September 1, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
10,000 BC is the greatest movie ever made. It is an imaginative interpretation of the past that connects us to who we are today. It is timeless mythology that could be told to hunter and gathers around a camp fire, and also touch our human yearning for mythology today. Our need for mythology has not changed in 12,000 years. We are basically the same humans.
10,000 BC celebrates the beautiful social bonding humans have with each other, and says this quality is really what makes us civilized. It completely made me rethink what we typically call an "advanced" civilization. Does "advanced" mean technology, mathematics, and great architectural achievements? Or is what truly makes us advanced is how we love our families, friends, and villagers, and how we can work together, using this social bonding to give us meaning? It made me rethink respect for the Egyptian civilization and the great pyramids. If you think about it, the pyramids are great accomplishment of human stupidity. What "great" civilization would expend huge amounts of human effort to build enormous, pointless structures? Was the Egyptian civilization really a totalitarian social structure that relied on huge amounts of slaves to carry out the religious wishes of the minority? The truth is, we just don't know.
D,Ley grows into the hero in this epic story. At first, he really just wants to save his girl. Romantic love is his basic drive. As his journey unfolds, he learns of his father. He learns his father was a great man that allowed his people to believe he was a coward just so he could keep his struggling tribe together. D,Ley's first attempt to rescue his girl Evolet shows lack of experience and impatience. Tic'Tic, an older and wiser hunter, and friend of D,Ley's father, takes the time to pass his wisdom to D,Ley. He teaches D,Ley some men take on a circle of responsibility that encloses many people. When D,Ley has achieved full hero status, he leads thousands from various cultures to "take them down". Joseph Campbell would have loved it.
There is also something about 10,000 BC that is genius. 10,000 BC turns mythology inside out and shows how myth is intertwined with prophecy. Tic'Tic teaches prophecy can be fulfilled in many ways. Prophecy is what aids our hero. Without the prophecy, D,Ley could not have gathered such an army, and could not have exploited the weakness of the Almighty. D'Ley fulfills these prophecies because people want to see them fulfilled. When you watch 10,000 BC, you are watching the mythology unfold in all its accidental luck but ultimately fueled by our greater human qualities. Qualities such as love, friendship, loyalty, courage, respect, and honor is the real driving force, not prophecy. These qualities are really what makes our hero and his people the more advanced civilization. When you watch 10,000 BC, you may not realize it, but you become a participant of mythology. Your very own yearning for great, meaningful story telling is awakened. The alternate ending shows the narator concluding the story to a future generation. I'm thinking they should have stuck with that ending to bring home the fact you are watching a fictionalized story packaged as a handed down myth. This would have helped some people "get" this movie. It justifies why the saber-tooth tiger was so big. It's a story. Stories exaggerate for effect.
Many people have criticized 10,000 BC as being historically a farce. Well, watch the bonus material on the blu-ray about the book "Fingerprints of the Gods" by Graham Hancock. Hancock is interviewed and talks about maps found showing land mass before the ice age in their predicted location given continental drift. This is a complete unaddressed mystery. It suggests there were advanced civilizations way earlier than 2,500 BC. So "10,000 BC" takes some liberty on a possibility for this mystery. We don't know everything about our past. But what makes "10,000 BC" so great is that it helps us realize to understand the value of our current civilization, we need to understand our fundamental nature as hunter and gathers. Our basic social instincts come from living in small groups. A civilization that drifts too far from our social origins will eventually fall, as many "advanced" civilization in the past have.
SLOW September 1, 2008 Very slow and not interesting at all, i had to shut it off halfway through...
a surprise hit August 31, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
My daughter (15 yrs old) wanted this, so I purchased the DVD, thinking it would be a typical teens' adventure film, long on action and short on sense. I was pleasantly surprised..... the plot is limited, and more than little free with the geographical locations of historical events, but the filmed settings and scenery are spectacular, the acting more than credible, and there is nice story line with a satisfactory "good guys win" ending. It kept me entertained throughout, even on the second viweing. So if you are looking for a film both the adults and kids will like, its a great choice.
10000 BC - An Extra Star For The Effects, But Too Many Holes August 31, 2008 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
10,000 B.C. was a movie I looked forward to for a long time. I really had high hopes for this one. I love fantasy cinema of the past as much as science fiction. Conan - The Complete Quest is one of my favorite series of movies. And that cool tiger on the poster had me expecting some great special effects.
Well, the special effects were very good. And the score was good at times too, though it did seem over-done after a while with very few softer parts. But that's where the good ends.
For starters, this movie really made me resent the over-use of narration in movies. When you watch the deleted scenes and alternate ending, it's clear the narrator was telling the story to the next generation. Yet the final cut of this movie doesn't let you see that. It didn't really matter though, because I found myself alternately wondering "is this just a little over-dramatic" and "they spoke english with a British accent in 10000 BC?"
And of course the historical inaccuracies were unavoidable. I understand some want to give them a pass on that, but then they shouldn't have named this after a year. Apparantly, all white people had dreadlocks 10000 BC. And all the races of the world were within a few days walk of each other too. Still, I can accept a movie as a work of fantasy except when the story is weak. And the story is very weak.
The movie starts off with cheesy prophecies and the young hero speaking way more seriously than a kid could about "eternal love" in his heart. Never mind, everything that happens was in a prophecy. And oh yeah, no matter where this guy walks everybody knew his father. In fact, the entire story line is unbelievable even as a fantasy movie because it's inconsistent with itself. It gets funny fast.
Other than the aforementioned deleted scenes and alternate ending, there's no special features to speak of. Some of those scenes have some incomplete CG sequences that made me laugh too.
If you are not too critical, sure you can enjoy this. But there are just too many better movies to watch to really go out of your way to see this. Wait for it to play on cable.
Avoid.
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