When Dinosaurs Ruled the Earth
When Dinosaurs Ruled the Earth | |
---|---|
Directed by | Val Guest |
Written by | Val Guest |
Story by | J. G. Ballard (Treatment) |
Produced by | Aida Young |
Starring | Victoria Vetri Robin Hawdon Patrick Allen Imogen Hassall |
Cinematography | Dick Bush |
Edited by | Peter Curran |
Music by | Mario Nascimbene |
Production company | |
Distributed by | Warner Bros. |
Release dates |
|
Running time | 100 minutes (United Kingdom) 96 minutes (United States) |
Countries | United Kingdom United States[3] |
Languages | Aboriginal languages English |
Budget | £566,000[4] or £2.5 million[5] |
When Dinosaurs Ruled the Earth (titled When Dinosaurs Ruled the World in the U.K.[3]) is a 1970 British fantasy film from Hammer Films, written and directed by Val Guest, and starring Victoria Vetri. It was produced by Aida Young. This was the third in Hammer's "Cave Girl" series, preceded by One Million Years B.C. (1966) and Prehistoric Women (1967); it was followed by Creatures the World Forgot (1971).[6]
Plot
[edit]A time of beginnings, of darkness, of light, of the Sun, the Earth, the sea, of man! The beginnings of man living with man, by the sea, in the mountains. The beginning of love, hate, and fear. Man's fear of the unknown. Man's fear lest the Sun should leave him, leave him alone in everlasting darkness. A time when the color of a woman's hair condemned her to sacrifice to the Sun. A time when there was as yet no Moon.
The Cliff Tribe led by Kingsor are about to sacrifice three blonde women to their Sun God, but one of the women, Sanna, escapes and is rescued by fishermen of the Seaside Tribe, among whom is Tara, who becomes enamoured with her.
Tara takes Sanna to his people, who also worship the Sun God, but without sacrifices. After building a hut for herself, she joins them at a celebration of a successful hunt, in which the men have captured a plesiosaur. The plesiosaur breaks free, but is subsequently killed and butchered. Ayak, a brunette woman who is jealous of Tara's feelings for Sanna, denounces Sanna as a witch and incites the elder women against her.
Kingsor and his men arrive, looking for Sanna. She flees, and hunters of her former tribe, led by Kane, give chase. During the search, the hunters are attacked by a Chasmosaurus, which gores Kane. When Tara seeks Sanna, the Chasmosaurus charges him and injures Khaku, one of his companions. He is chased to a cliff, where the Chasmosaurus loses its footing and plunges to its death. Khaku dies of his injuries shortly after, while Kane's wounds are tended to by the Seaside tribeswoman Ulido.
Khaku's funeral pyre at the shore is followed by a tribal frenzy during which an enraged Ayak burns down Sanna's hut. Sanna meanwhile becomes trapped by a carnivorous plant, and cuts off a portion of her hair in order to escape. As Tara goes looking for Sanna, he finds her hair trapped beneath the plant and assumes she is dead. Satisfied by this, Sanna's former tribe stop hunting her and join with Tara's tribe, with Kane, now healed, marrying Ulido.
Sanna seeks shelter in a Megalosaurus nest, fooling the mother and its baby into thinking she is one of them. Sanna grows attached to the baby and plays hide-and-seek with it, as well as teaching it to sit. Tara meanwhile sees one of the women in Sanna's tribe dyeing her daughter's hair with tar, in an attempt to prevent her from being sacrificed like Sanna.
Some weeks later, while Tara is hiking back to his tribe, which has been taken over by the overzealous Kingsor, he is carried off by a giant Rhamphorhynchus. After killing the pterosaur, he finds Sanna and her tamed dinosaur. They are subsequently discovered and Tara is sacrificed to a Tylosaurus by Kingsor. Tara manages to escape and returns to Sanna.
The tribe then goes searching for Sanna again, and the two run away into a forest, where Sanna's dinosaur "parent" rescues her, but Tara is recaptured and the tribe prepare to burn him. The coastline, however, begins to recede, and the tribe is attacked by giant crabs. As a tsunami looms overhead, Sanna arrives to save Tara and they escape with Kane and Ulido aboard a raft. Kingsor tries to command the water to heal in a last effort to appease his deities, only to be swept away. While Ayak is running towards the raft, she steps into a trap of quicksand and is sucked down to her death. As the waters calm, the four survivors stop to witness a lunar eclipse, left in awe by the creation of the Moon above them.
Cast
[edit]- Victoria Vetri as Sanna
- Robin Hawdon as Tara
- Patrick Allen as Kingsor / Narrator
- Drewe Henley as Khaku
- Sean Caffrey as Kane
- Magda Konopka as Ulido
- Imogen Hassall as Ayak
- Patrick Holt as Ammon
- Carol Hawkins as Yani
Production
[edit][The film] was a giggle, that was Hammer and they asked me if I’d like to do a prehistoric one, as I'd never done a prehistoric one, I said "Yes, why not, let's have a go," [...] As there was no language in it, it was all made-up language, nobody had to learn their lines.
Writing
[edit]Director Val Guest's screenplay was based on a treatment by J. G. Ballard (author of Empire of the Sun).[8] But like Hammer's other prehistoric films, When Dinosaurs Ruled the Earth anachronistically portrays the dinosaurs of the Mesozoic Era from about 252 to 66 million years ago living alongside Homo sapiens of the Late Quaternary Period (±200,000 years ago). The film's characters use a language that was specially written for the film, albeit of only a dozen words or so, a frequent one being "neekro", which means "kill", and also "akita", which is heard many times.
Special effects
[edit]The effects unit at Bray Studios was used on the production.[9] The stop-motion animation creature effects were created by Jim Danforth, assisted by David W. Allen and Roger Dicken, with each model costing over $3,000 each on average.[10] Allen made the crab puppet, which was made from a real crab shell, though Dicken modified it with horns and spikes in order to make it look less plain. Dicken sculpted the plesiosaur, the Tylosaurus, the feet of the Rhamphorhynchus and model humans used in scenes where characters interacted directly with the creatures.[11]
Due to lack of time and money, and a violent altercation between Danforth and James Carreras,[12] many scenes were cancelled, including one that featured giant ants which would have been portrayed through an articulated, dog-sized model created by Dicken for close-up shots.[11]
Filming
[edit]Exteriors were shot on Gran Canaria and Fuerteventura in the Canary Islands. Locations included Maspalomas beach, Ansite Mountain, Amurga, and Caldera de Tejeda. Guest recalled, "there was one enormous German hotel and practically nothing else on the island, there was one awful road, that you went by jeep; you got there by boat, there was no airport or anything. [...] We planned very, very, carefully."[7]
Release
[edit]The film had its world premiere on 1 October 1970 in London with a U.K. general release on 25 October 1970.[13][2] It was released in the United States debuting in San Francisco on 10 February 1971.[2]
Home media
[edit]The film was released on DVD as an exclusive from Best Buy with a G rating, but was quickly recalled because it was the original uncut version and contained nudity; it is now a collector's item. The uncut version was also released on Blu-ray in the United States on 28 February 2017 and DVD on 4 April by Warner Archive.[14][15]
Reception
[edit]Box office
[edit]The film was popular at the box office.[16] In the United States the film grossed $1.25 million at the box office.[17]
Award and nominations
[edit]The film was nominated for Best Visual Effects at the 44th Academy Awards in 1971. It lost to the Disney film Bedknobs and Broomsticks. The nomination was given to Jim Danforth and Roger Dicken.[18]
Homage and tributes
[edit]The special effects are considered a benchmark in portraying realistic stop-motion animation effects. The film's title is referenced in Steven Spielberg's Jurassic Park with a large rectangular banner hanging in the island's visitors' center. The banner later plays a visibly prominent role in the final action sequence as the film ends.
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "When Dinosaurs Ruled the Earth". American Film Institute. Retrieved 6 September 2019.
- ^ a b c Maxford, Howard (17 December 2018). Hammer Complete: The Films, the Personnel, the Company. McFarland. ISBN 9781476670072. Retrieved 6 September 2019.
- ^ a b "When Dinosaurs Ruled the Earth". American Film Institute. Retrieved 3 April 2020.
- ^ Bruce G. Hallenbeck, British Cult Cinema: Hammer Fantasy and Sci-Fi, Hemlock Books 2011 p204
- ^ Kinsey, Wayne (2007). Hammer Films: The Elstree Studio Years. p. 136.
- ^ McKay, Sinclair (2007). A Thing of Unspeakable Horror: The History of Hammer Films. p. 105.
- ^ a b Fowler, Roy (1988). "Interview with Val Guest". British Entertainment History Project.
- ^ "When Dinosaurs Ruled the Earth (1970)". Archived from the original on 24 February 2016.
- ^ Howard Maxford (8 November 2019). Hammer Complete: The Films, the Personnel, the Company. McFarland. pp. 70–71. ISBN 978-1-4766-2914-8.
- ^ "Jim Danforth Interview". Fantascene. Vol. 1, no. 2. Summer 1976.
- ^ a b "Roger Dicken: Monster Maker!". Monster Zone. 30 January 2022. Retrieved 10 August 2022.
- ^ "[...] ricordo che ci fu un violento scontro tra l'animatore Jim Danforth e Carreras, che praticamente lo mandò via perché stava impiegando troppo tempo a completare i trucchi: quel film è infatti uscito con alcune sequenze di effetti ottici tagliate, perché la lavorazione fu appunto interrotta."
Cozzi, L. (1999), Hammer. La fabbrica dei mostri, Profondo Rosso, p. 149, ISBN 88-89084-09-X - ^ "When Dinosaurs Ruled the Earth". American Film Institute. Retrieved 6 September 2019.
- ^ When Dinosaurs Ruled the Earth | Blu-ray | United States | Warner Archive Collection Warner Bros. | 1970 | 100 min | Not rated | 28 Feb. 2017
- ^ When Dinosaurs Ruled the Earth | DVD | United States | Warner Archive Collection Warner Bros. | 1970 | 100 min | Rated G | 4 April 2017
- ^ Marcus Hearn, The Hammer Vault, Titan Books, 2011 p111
- ^ Maxford, Howard (17 December 2018). Hammer Complete: The Films, the Personnel, the Company. McFarland. ISBN 9781476670072. Retrieved 6 September 2019.
- ^ "The 44th Academy Awards (1972) Nominees and Winners". Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. 5 October 2014. Retrieved 24 April 2022.
External links
[edit]- 1970 films
- 1970 animated films
- 1970s fantasy adventure films
- 1970s English-language films
- 1970s monster movies
- British fantasy adventure films
- Films about dinosaurs
- Fictional-language films
- Films directed by Val Guest
- Films shot in the Canary Islands
- Films using stop-motion animation
- Giant monster films
- Hammer Film Productions films
- Prehistoric people in popular culture
- Films based on works by J. G. Ballard
- Films scored by Mario Nascimbene
- Films produced by Aida Young
- 1970s British films
- English-language fantasy adventure films