The Land That Time Forgot/The People That Time Forgot Reviews

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The Land That Time Forgot/The People That Time Forgotx$4.52

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THE LAND THAT TIME FORGOT: Original Theatrical Trailer THE PEOPLE THAT TIME FORGOT: MPN: 027616910783 - UPC: 027616910783



Customer Reviews

  • Two films that the public forgot.


    By A30SEFSHDK5RX on 2006-02-06
    PLOT:
    The Land That Time Forgot (1975): The story begins in June of 1916. World War I is raging on land as well as in the water. A German submarine controlled by Captain Von Schoenvorts (John McEnery) spots a British warship and torpedos it. Two of the survivors are Bowen Tyler (Doug McClure) and Lisa Clayton (Susan Penhaligon), civilians. Pretty soon they discover that some of the British officers survived as well, including Captain Bradley (Keith Barron). The survivors watch the submarine come out of the water and devise a plan to hijack it. They row the lifeboats over to the sub and successfully take the German crew hostage. Tyler commands the crew to sail due West to the United States. After 6 days, no land turns up. Tyler discovers that the Germans placed a magnet next to the compass, and that they had really been traveling south for 6 days. This means they are actually near South America. They find an island surrounded on all sides by ice and rock. The only way in is through an underwater cave. Captain Von Schoenvorts believes this to be a legendary island known as "Caprona". The two crews realize that on this island, the war means nothing. They decide to put their differences aside, cooperate with each other, and explore the island. Once inside the island, the crews realize that Caprona is a lost world of dinosaurs and cavemen. The biggest question is, "Will they get out alive?"

    The People That Time Forgot (1977): Tyler's message in a bottle is found off of the coast of Scotland at the end of 1917. A year later, an expedition is formed to find Tyler and the island of Caprona. The expedition includes Tyler's boyhood friend Maj. Ben McBride (Patrick Wayne), Lady Charlotte Cunningham (Sarah Douglas), Dr. Edwin Norfolk (Thorley Walters), and pilot Hogan (Shane Rimmer). They take a ship to the island, then fly a plane to get inside it. The plane is attacked by a Pterodactyl and crashes. Hogan stays with the plane to fix it. The other three decide to go off and explore. The explorers see many of the dinosaurs that Tyler described in his letter. They eventually come across a cavegirl named Ajor (Dana Gillespie). Ajor speaks English and tells them that Tyler taught her how to speak it. She also says that Tyler was taken prisoner by a group of mutants. The four travelers then set out to find him, with hopes that he is still alive.

    COMMENTS: These two films are based on a trilogy of books by Edgar Rice Burroughs, the creator of Tarzan. The storyline is awfully similar to Arthur Conan Doyle's "The Lost World." Both films were directed by Kevin Connor and featured Doug McClure as Bowen Tyler. The special effects are ridiculous by today's standards, but the stories are pretty cool. Look out for a cameo appearance of David Prowse (Darth Vader himself) as the executioner in the second film. These films are great for anyone interested in dinosaur or adventure films. Kevin Connor also directed another Burroughs adaptation called "At The Earth's Core" (1976), the first story of the Pelucidar series. It was released between the other two films and also featured Doug McClure in the starring role. Many people mistake this film for being another sequel, but it is unrelated to the other two films.

  • better than you think


    By A1MK02HC440QT8 on 2005-12-09
    i watched these films as a kid and loved them. sure they are a little dated in the fx but these movies both have a heart and do just what a movie should do,make you enjoy them as you watch them. no they don't have a deep message,but sometimes you just need to sit back pop some popcorn and get lost in "the land that time forgot" go on and enjoy!!!!!!

  • Silly Dinos but still fun


    By A3GQKB1KF0CRPE on 2005-10-20
    This is a great double-feature Drive-In fair. The monsters are hokey, but this is still great family type fun. They were done on a shoestring so what do you expect? Based on Edgar Rice Burroughs novel The Land People Forgot has sort of a Lost World premise. Americans and Brits are travelling to South America when they are torpedoed by a German U-Boat. Later the survivors manage to catch up and overtake the submarine. They end up finding a lost continent, before you can say "Is Barney Purple" there are monsters trying to make lunch out of our explorers. Instead, they make Barney Burgers. Then they find T-Tex, cavemen and all sorts of adventures. However, Doug McClure (Travis of The Virginian) and Susan Penhaligon are left behind in the final brouhaha, which leaves the opening for the second movie. The People Time Forgot.

    Patrick Wayne and Sarah Douglas star in the second film. It has the feel of the second Planet of the Apes where they come to find what happened to Chuck-baby. This time Wayne and Douglas are flying into the island to see if they can find McClure and Penhaligon. There is more monster chompings, a sexy gal in a One Million Years B.C. costume that says she knows McClure and can lead them to him. It's a race of time to keep away from the bad guys and find McClure before the whole bloody isle goes BOOM!

    So pop the popcorn, turn out the lights and pretend you are at a Drive-In. They play better!

  • McClure...For Sure!!


    By A2CT2SA6KFE8GC on 2005-08-18
    Land That Time Forgot is a pretty cool movie. Sure, it may seem silly these days when everyone has seen Jurassic Park and a bunch of other CGI creatures in various flicks(not that CGI looks very real either, it's just better at showing fluid movement). So, yes, the puppet dinosaurs in this film will probably get a few chuckles from you. That's all part of the fun though. The story is pretty cool. The whole idea of a hidden island stuck in prehistoric times is an interesting one. The story takes place during WWI, where fueding British and German naval officers have to band together to survive and get off the island, which looks to be somewhere in the arctic. And what better man to have with you on an island of dinosaurs and hostile neanderthals than Doug McClure? Highly recommended and fun. Midnite Movie indeed! The People That Time Forgot follows a rescue mission to find Doug McClure(he had put a message in a bottle and thrown it into the sea where it conveniently ended up on British shores and into the hands of McClure's buddy). This search party consists of Patrick Wayne taking over hero duties(he's no McClure, that's for sure), an English professor(with cane), B movie queen Sarah Douglas(with the worst Princess Leia hairdo you've ever seen) and a supersexy cavewoman who's too hot and well groomed to be believable as a neanderthal. Basically this is all thrown together as an excuse to rehash the events of the first film. McClure's character has apparently taught the entire island how to speak english, including the villans! So now we don't have to bother with subtitles. The evil tribe of humans seems way more evolved than any kind of cro-magnon society. They wear armor, use swords and ride horses. They look like the Juns from the Beastmaster crossed with samurais. McClure gets his cameo when our heroes reach the Mountain Of Skulls(scary) and find him prisoner. They stage a jailbreak that would make Thin Lizzy proud and try to escape before the volcano erupts and destroys everything(again). More fun with rubber dinosaurs and miniatures. Well worth your time if you like your movies a little bad. See it before they remake it.

  • TIme Should Not Forget


    By A2VMIC0WYC2VU4 on 2008-08-15
    This are two of the best Sci-Fi/Fantasy/Action Movies made in the 70s, they are still as good today as when they came out the first time. I am happy to have found them together on one DVD. I really enjoyed watching several times since I bought the DVD. I highly recommend that anyone who loves good 70s moves with prehistoric creatures and "cavemen & women" buy these movies.

  • What A Great Package Of Films MGM Thank You.
    By A36AH31X84FIC8 on 2007-10-30
    This is a great package of two fun classic films: The Land That Time Forgot/The People That Time Forgot. Just wonderfully presented here on DVD. Well worth your hard earned money for a B-Movie Night Fest anytime you feel in the mood. The Transfers for both films are excellent bright and vivid to see. this pre- CGI so the effects are a little dated, but still entertaining to watch. actually i'd take the effects of old over the effects we have now, because at times it does get tiresome to watch computer graphic effect films and one long for old school effects even with the mistakes at times.

    Both Films Are PG For Lauguage and Violence.

    The First One: The Land That Time Forgot is PG For Mostly Violence which is tame by today's standard of films, but contains no lauguage. The Second one: The People That Time Forgot has Lauguage and Violence/Sword Play And Things Blowing Up, But both are worry free for family viewing just thought you should know.

    But It's All In Good Fun. reminds me of when films were loose and carefree and fun to watch.

    Highly Recommended Films.

    P.S. It would be nice if Warlords Of Atlantis was Available On DVD To Finish the Trilogy Of films.

  • When Doug McClure ruled the Saturday Matinees...
    By A220FJEQNGMSRN on 2007-12-28
    Before Luke Skywalker, there was Doug McClure... His John Dark-Kevin Connor fantasy adventures were a mainstay of Summer holiday movies in the days before Star Wars: they weren't masterpieces, they didn't boast state-of-the-art special effects, but they were exactly what an audience of kids wanted from a film back in the mid 70s.

    The poster for The Land That Time Forgot made it look like this was going to be the greatest film ever made when I was a kid - dinosaurs, U-boats, cavemen, erupting volcanoes and Doug McClure: how could it NOT be great? Well, this being the mid-70s, the crummy special effects in the form of Roger Dickens' prehistoric puppets that don't exactly give Jurassic Park a run for its money. But still, this low-budget adaptation of Edgar Rice Burroughs' terrific adventure novel does have some good ideas in its script as well as dinosaurs, U-boats, cavemen, erupting volcanoes and Doug McClure, so it's not a total wash, and compared to the incredibly poor sequel, The People That Time Forgot, which threw away all that was best about the premise, it's still fun, if somewhat muted. And it has a really great poster.

    The People That Time Forgot was barely released, and it's not hard to see why. Filmed on the cheap - this time round there are few dinosaurs, glove puppet or otherwise - it drags on forever to little effect. With McClure reduced to a cameo, the film focuses on the rescue mission led by Patrick Wayne, Sarah Douglas and Thorley Walters but apart from Dana Gillespie's spectacular cleavage and an okay score from John Scott, there's not much to recommend it. Look upon it as a bonus feature to the original.


  • Two not so forgettable films.
    By A1Z1NQJUJQ5CRO on 2010-03-29
    MGM's Midnite Movie series continues with the release of two films back to back,"The Land That Time Forgot"(Aug/75) and "The People That Time Forgot"(July/77).Even though the latter film is the third of the series it is a direct sequel to the first."At the Earth's Core"(/76)the second in the series was available at one time but is not anymore.
    The Land That Time Forgot,like its' sequels,stars Doug McClure as Bowen Tyler.The film starts with a bottle with a message inside being tossed into the ocean off a cliff.As the opening credits roll it floats onto a distant shore(Scotland,we later learn)and is picked up by a resident there who starts to read the message,which dissolves into the rest of the movie.It seems Tyler was an American passenger on a steam ship which was torpedoed by a German U-Boat(circa 1917).Floating in life boats the remainder of the ships crew with Tyler come upon the U-Boat at the surface.They manage to take over the boat and head for a neutral port.But the Germans sabotage the compass and the sub sails south for hundreds of miles instead of west.The sub changes hands once again into the Germans' and then back again to Tyler and the group.They sail farther until they come upon a mysterious island that the German U-Boat Captain believes is one mentioned but never explored by the famous explorer Capt.Cook;Caprona.
    Low on food and provisions they decide to take the sub through a large cavern which brings them out into the interior of the island.It is a tropical but prehistoric land.During their forays onto the island they have some close encounters with more than a few dinosaurs.They eventually meet the native population and befriend one Ahm,a friendly caveman who becomes their ersatz guide.As time passes they learn there are more than one tribe of humans there,each an advancement on the evolutionary scale,with Ahm's tribe at the bottom.To get home they discover and start to refine crude oil for the sub's engines while Tyler and his girlfriend search the rest of the island.When the island's volcano becomes active the U-Boats sub lieutenant opts to take the sub and get out of there,leaving Tyler behind.However strange gasses from the air quickly incapacitate the crew and Tyler and his girlfriend watch in horror as the sub sinks and blows up before their eyes.The two are left stranded,head north on Caprona and send the message in the bottle that the film opened with.
    McClure known more for his television work(The Virginian,Roots,etc)never made a major dent in films,but he does a credible job in this series of B pictures.This film was done by the same English company that did "Tales From the Crypt" and others,Amicus productions.Unlike the movie to follow,this film had better production values and the story is far more interesting.The whole German U-Boat part of the plot runs well and keeps your interest.I rate this a solid 3 stars.
    The people That Time Forgot again stars Doug McClure as Bowen Tyler but with a much lesser role this time out.The leading man this time around is John Wayne's son David who,like McClure,tried his hand in film work but just didn't have what it took to become a major name.David had an even harder time of it than McClure as his Dad was still very much alive and still casting a big acting shadow from which David could never seem to come out from under.Wayne is Ben McBride who has been persuaded by a professor friend of his of the message from the bottle's authenticity(from the first film) and has under taken this mission to find his old friend.Along for the ride,beside the professor is a camerawomen and his co-pilot.The co-pilot is to help him operate the plane which is stowed on board the ship which is taking them to Caprona.Once there McBride and company head out to find Tyler.At first their plane search is not successful but eventually they find the interior,land and start on their way.They soon run into a fleeing cavewoman who knows Tyler and can speak broken English;taught to her by Tyler.In fact it seems her entire tribe was taught by him but they have been pretty well wiped out by another tribe.It is this other tribe they seek as they are probably holding Tyler hostage.As with the first film the group again encounters more than a few dinosaurs,some harmless but others quite malevolent.Along the way they are confronted by tribesmen riding on horses dressed in Kabooki-like masks.They speak English and say they are there on Tyler's behest to greet them and take them to him.But it is a lie and before you know it all are captured and the two women in the party are now to be offered as sacrifices to the local volcano God.However the men's imprisonment has once good consequence;they find Tyler in an adjacent cell and are reunited.Together they overcome their guards and all escape the tribe and their mountain skull-shaped retreat.However the tribe dogs them all the way and Tyler gets killed before they can reach the plane.McBride and the original party,now with the cave woman, make a shaky and harrowing get away in the plane.They reunite with the ship and sail home.
    David Wayne really brings nothing to the acting table here.In fact McClure has a great dying scene in the film in the arms of Wayne;one of the best moments in the film.In fact all the acting is pretty much pedestrian stuff and the plot does nothing to enhance things either.There are many moments where the film is padded with much fleeing footage and not much else which again weakens things considerably.The special effects in regards to the dinosaurs are also cheaper looking this time out.Watch for the wires on the Pterodactyl that brings down the plane at the beginning and watch quickly and you will see human feet under the monster in the cave.I can only give this film 2 1/2 stars at best.
    Technically both films here have been transferred pretty well and are shown in their original 1:85:1 widescreen aspect ratio.Other than their respective trailers there are no special features at all.This is of course another DSD,double sided disc,and as always watch out for any scuffs and scratches that either may come with the disc or that YOU may put on the disc inadvertently.I wish they would stop making these things from being made as they are just cheap(i.e.more profits for its' maker)and far too prone to damage.
    The Land That Time Forgot is the clear winner amongst these films.These were the perfect Drive-In features of their day and are still good to watch with a beverage of your choice,your favourite main squeeze or family members by your side(great for kids)and a big bowl of popcorn...not necessarily in that order.

  • Just plain FUN...
    By A33UL9XBKBB2H9 on 2010-03-10
    THOROUGHLY enjoyed this old style sci-fi "semi-thriller" . In general the whole family can watch and enjoy . Man meets or "meats" old dinosauer world in present . VERY GOOD effects for the day . Patrick Wayne does his father proud . Usual "lost people" and undeveloped world hidden in the 'developed' world .
    Dinos , cavemen/women , society as we think it "may have been" in early years . TRULY good and classic sci-fi without "space warp".
    Good old fashioned fight scenes , captures , escape , rescue .....
    Its all there . GRAB the Orville Reddenbacher's , fill the bowl , gather the family and enjoy .

  • Remembering my youth.
    By A3HV3Z1HLR91CK on 2009-08-20
    When i saw this was on DVD i just had to have it for my collection.
    I have very fond memories from when i was a kid.

    This was probably my first dinosaur film. I loved every minute of it.

    Ok, the film is pretty old and dated but it still makes me smile. Some of the acting compared to today's actors is laughable at best.

    My 8 year old son watched it with me the other day. He laughed but very much enjoyed both films.

    I hope you enjoy the fun and laughter from these late 70's films.

  • Good oldies
    By AGJO7Q4XUK709 on 2009-07-13
    Both of these films are good quality films that were done right. I appreciate movies for what they are, and these are good films. The special effects were good for their day, so don't expect Jurassic Park stuff here. Overall a really good buy.

  • The Land That Time Forgot / The People That Time Forgot
    By A2IDS3018R4PJC on 2009-07-11
    I enjoyed watching theses movies when i was a kid. Of course times of changed since then. Which movies today having CGI special effects. This may have cheeses special effects with dinosaurs. But its still a fun old 70s action adventure movies. Its certainly no Jurassic Park by far.:)

  • The Land that Time Forgot/The People that Time Forgot
    By A2D2L7U864TJH1 on 2009-06-17

    I am a Baby-Boomer and these are the kinds of movies I grew up with on Saturday afternoons! Packed full of adventure and creatures. The cast is exceptional and my deciding vote on this set was the actor Doug McClure and the fact it was Based on the novel by Edgar Rice Burroughs.
    It's a great afternoon with a bowl of popcorn!

  • Okay, okay, so it's not Jurassic Park...
    By AN7W6BNGFFL6D on 2009-06-13
    ...but it still brought alot to my imagination when I was a kid (wayyyy before CGI), and I loved both movies! I still do and I'm so very glad to have found them on Amazon!! Thanks Amazon!

  • the land that time forgot / the people that time forgot
    By A5MD7MCXRF4PA on 2008-06-20
    The special effects are cheesy, but I still really like these movies and getting two for one just makes it that much of a better deal.

  • the land that time forgot and the people that time forgot
    By A21D6JCL5IXT9F on 2008-06-12
    This is a great sci-fi and fantasy double feature that should be considered to be classics.

  • land that time forgot
    By A2JPAKDQ44E9XQ on 2008-02-08
    one of my favorites. so glad i was able to get a copy. it came in great shape

  • Scifi Cult Classic!
    By A3G6L62GNSARSR on 2008-12-09
    This two videos are excellent!. Is a must to any collector of SciFi Movies.
    The Land of the Time Forgot is a classic of my childhood, primitive fx but if you like ancient classics this movie is for you.
    People that Time Forgot is a sequel of before movie. I recommended!

  • Enjoyable fantasy but has a few faults
    By A3GZC98GCCOPFS on 2005-12-16
    Overall, "The Land that Time Forgot" is a decent fantasy/adventure fare with interesting characters and a good story but unfortunately I have a couple of problems with it.
    It seemed that the German and English sailors couldn't wait to start shooting at everything that moved whether it be dinosaur or CroMagnon.
    Its one thing with the pleisosaur started munching on crew members and attacking the submarine, but later on what exactly where the two T-Rex's doing that warranted their slaughter? McClure and crew didn't seem to be too concerned about escaping and the T-Rex's weren't even attacking them, but what do they do? Shoot first and ask questions later apparently.
    The same is true when the poor triceratops just happened to be in the wrong place at the wrong time when the trigger-happy U-boat crew started blasting away for absolutely no reason. It looked like all the triceratops were doing was protecting their egg nest, but nooooooo....blast 'em!!! The sad tear rolling down the snout of the dead triceratops was a fitting metaphor for the impulsive violence of McClure's crew.
    But the biggest indignity of the film is the tragic figure of the friendly CroMagnon Ahm who tries to befriend McClure and crew, tries to warn them of the "evil" CroMagnons found further up the valley but nooooooooooooo, he ends up getting a la carted away by a pterodactyl while McClure and friends do nothing to help him out. Apparently they must have been out of ammunition from all their other "battles" rather than help out the one native that befriended them.
    Regardless, the film is fun to watch and shouldn't be taken at as serious as I have (tongue in cheek) written above.

  • Lost Point
    By A1IW3XZT2SUES8 on 2006-02-26
    Moorcock said they took the writing assignment because they thought ERB's idea was good -- about an island where evolution goes through all the stages from reptilian to advanced human in a single lifetime. They wrote it to reflect this idea, but it is obvious from the reviews that the director buried the idea in favour of a volcanic eruption and other cliches. Moorcock refused to work on the second movie after he saw what they had done to the first. He understood that they would stick to a script he had done with the approval of the Burroughs estate. However the producer, John Dark, reneged on the agreement and the result is what we now have, still with a shadow of the original there if you look for it. Evidently, from the reviews, few noticed that there was a fairly funky plot buried in the finished first movie! The second movie is typically dumb, written by Amicus staffers.

  • Doug McClure versus man-eating dinosaurs and more
    By A2NJO6YE954DBH on 2005-02-28
    It is rather amazing that having used Edgar Rice Burroughs' Tarzan of the Apes for dozens of movies over the course of almost the entire century, Hollywood finally went back to ERB's novels to find another property for a film and ignored the John Carter of Mars series and went for "The Land That Time Forgot," a rather second-rate potboiler. But if you forgive the cheap special effects (be kind, it is a 1975 film) this is not a bad adventure story. Burroughs basically wrote his own version of "The Lost World" as a German U-Boat sinks a British ship whose crew manages to take over the submarine. Traveling to South America they find a lost continent where there are dinosaurs and cavemen (ergo, "The Land That Time Forgot"), neither of whom has any respect for civilized human beings.

    Doug McClure stars as American adventurer Bowen Tyler in this British production. McClure and director Kevin Connor would make two other similar films based on Burroughs novels, "At the Earth's Core," from the more ambitious Pelucidar series and a sequel to this film "The People That Time Forgot." Along for the ride are the beautiful and brainy biologist in distress, Lisa Clayton (Susan Penhaligon), U-Boat Captain Von Schoenvorts (John McEnery) and his cunning second in command Deitz (Anthony Ainley), along with a savy Brit named Bradley (Keith Barron) who manages to be put off by being eaten by the dinosaurs longer than most of his mates. Of course not only do these people have to watch out for dinosaurs and cavemen, they have to watch out for each other. "The Land That Time Forgot" is a film that teaches its young British audience that even during World War I when the Germans were not Nazis you still could not trust them.

    The story is basic adventure, with Tyler and company facing one peril after another. The script is decent, given the going ons; Michael Morcock worked on the script along with James Cawthorn, so there is an inherent assumption that all of the good stuff belongs to the noted fantasy writer. There is an attempt to get into some of ERB's reasoning for the existence of "Caprona," as the lost continent is called, but it only muddles the film until the action gets going again. The cast takes the situation seriously, which is a prerequisite in any film like this, but while the action is above average the special effects are tacky. The dinosaurs are laughable and the miniatures are not much better. Still, you get an indication of how much fun the action-adventures elements are (for this particular genre and this particular time) when the film still gets 4 stars despite the hokey dinosaurs.

    "The People That Time Forgot" is the 1977 sequel, although in between the two there was the 1976 film "At the Earth's Core," which is mentioned mainly because all three films star Doug McClure, are directed by Kevin Connor, and are based on novels by ERB. Ironically, the tag line for this film makes it sound like the films are a trilogy, although "At the Earth's Core" is based on the Pelucidar series, which is quite different. "The People That Time Forgot" is definitely the weakest of the three, which is not all that surprising because it is based on the second book of a second rate series of potboilers by ERB. O
    .
    The basic plot reminds you a lot of "Return to the Planet of the Apes. Major Ben McBridge (Patrick Wayne) leads an expedition to Antarctica to find his friend, the American adventurer Bowen Tyler (Doug McClure), who is marooned on the lost continent, Caprona, a.k.a., the land that time forgot, where there are dinosaurs and cavemen. McBridge has a plane, but it crashes and his little expedition has to survive until they find McClure (where they can break the good news that they are there to rescue him!). McClure had to deal with Germans from a U-Boat but McBridge has to put up with Lady Charlotte Cunningham (Sarah Douglas), who goes from royal pain to damsel in distress pretty quickly once things start happening, Dr. Edwin Norfolk (Thorley Walters), who fortunately knows everything about dinosaurs and cavemen, and Hogan (Shane Rimmer), the faithful side kick who is the obvious first choice to be dinosaur food.

    "The People That Time Forgot" provides the same sort of lousy special effects that plagued "The Land That Time Forgot," but without the non-stop action and adventure that redeemed that first film. Besides, Tyler has ditched Lisa, his paramour from the first film and replaced her with Ajor (Dana Gillespie), a cave woman who probably took the pretty English biologist apart with that big knife. There is no need to watch this sequel out of a sense of completeness to the "story," because you are not going to be happy to the ending. However, pay attention to the Executioner, who is played by David Prowse, who came to this set after having wrapped up a little film called "Star Wars" that you might have heard about. That is the only reason I am rounding up on this DVD, because the first film is a four and the sequel is barely a three.

  • Great Cheese!
    By A34C35QFA4DC5J on 2008-09-07
    These movies bring back memories of the Sunday afternoon monster movies of the 70s in all their cheesy goodness. Obviously, special effects have gotten much more sophisticated in the last 30+ years; claymation was the state of the art at the time [pre-IL&M]. Both the story and the production of the first movie are superior to the second, but my wife and I enjoyed them both - if you are a fan of claymation/adventure movies, you will, too!

  • themeatnpotatoesofitall
    By AIA1EG1IVL1RW on 2010-05-15
    I love these films, went to one of them with me pops as a kid, Enjoyed it..
    Dad loved it because of the WW2 spin to it, and of course I loved it because it had dinosaurs attacking and eating people, doesn't get a 5 star because effects could have been better but are acceptable for B+ Genre..cool Doug MCclure flic he is always ready for a fight (check him out in "Humaniods from the Deep" and "At the Earth's Core")definetly in me collection sits between
    my dvd double features War Gods of the Deep/At the Earth's Core and Die Monster Die/Dunwich Horror..

  • Movie Review
    By A18YB1FYPWXEHQ on 2009-04-17
    The cavegal in the movie has makeup on and has the smallest costume on. She is a real movie star cave girl.
    Decent special effects. A pretty good set of "B" monster movies. Just don't spend too much money on this video.

  • LANDS AND PEOPLE TIME FORGOT
    By A3HL8OQGUEHMPH on 2008-05-02
    THE FILMS 'THE LAND THAT TIME FORGOT' AND 'THE PEOPLE TIME FORGOT'ARE CORNY BUT GOOD FUN IN THE 'LOST WORLD' STYLE THAT WAS AROUND PRE 'JURASSIC PARK'. AS IN 'ONE MILLION YEARS BC'THE HEAVING BOSOM OF THE CAVE GIRL IS AN ADDED BONUS.




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