10,000 B.C. | 
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| 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: $4.59 You Save: $24.39 (84%)
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Rating: 228 reviews Sales Rank: 643
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 Shipping: International shipping available Condition: Most orders shipped within 24 hours. All items include original artwork and packaging. We do not ship to Brazil, sorry. Satisfaction Guaranteed!
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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.Running Time: 109 min.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 223 more reviews...
Good old fashioned movie making at its finest October 13, 2008 This is an excellent movie. A good story well told. The CGI was as good as anything else I've seen recently. Don't believe the bad reviews from the short attention span crowd. This is a throwback to when Hollywood knew how to make an epic that had large scope and told a great story. This will be on my perennials list right along with Independence Day, Deep Impact, and Lord of the Rings.
A good story well told.
Nonsensical October 12, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
I had not expected much but this was even worst than I feared. Basically, it's a "Last of the Mohicans" wanna-be movie but the script is nonsensical. It's based on the borderline crackpot theory espoused by some that there were advanced human civilizations before the last Ice Age, spawned by refugees from Atlantis. Too many things defy a suspension of disbelief, however; I won't go through them all.
To cut to the point: while not the worst movie I've ever seen, this is a bad film. I would have been pissed if I would have paid full price to see it in the theater (or to buy this DVD).
Not recommended.
10,000 BC? October 11, 2008 dub the language, install subtitles but do not make people sit through this crap. the conversations in this movie had "gooder" vocab skills than myself. raise the rating, lose the talk, lose the clothes, up the violence and call me back. only the mammoths get three stars!!!!
Fun if you are younger than 9 October 6, 2008 Truly a mishmash of misinformation and adventure, but I knew that before ordering. It's a gift for a little boy. But the business end of the transaction was excellent.
Excellent Movie October 5, 2008 I saw this movie when it first came out at the movie theater. This is an amazing film. Lots of action, and excellent graphics. I dont know why people rated this movie so badly.
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