10,000 B.C.

10,000 B.C.

44% Liked It
liked it

10,000 B.C.

Camilla Belle, Steven Strait, Tim Barlow, Suri van Sornsen, Omar Sharif, Marco Khan, Joel Virgel, Cliff Curtis, Reece Ritchie

A prehistoric epic that follows a young mammoth hunter's journey through uncharted territory to secure the future of his tribe.

Id: 10870530

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Recent Reviews


  • September 29, 2009
    Alright, so 10,000 BC is not historically accurate, for instance woolly mammoths and horses did not roam earth at the same time, but as a bit of an escape, 10,000 BC is fine. The hero has to convince many tribes to join together to defeat the evil master.
  • July 11, 2009
    Roland Emmerich's latest blockbuster offering 10,000 BC tells the age old tale of a young tribesman D'Leh who crosses mountains to rescue his ladylove Evolet from the enemies.

    I thought it was terrible. Sure, some of the prehistoric animals looked fine, but that was about it...( read more). Talk about bloopers - the actors don't look prehistoric, the make-up was bad (who had perfect white teeth in 10,000 BC?) What's with the almost-dreadlocks? And the mammoths - weren't they supposed to belong to the Ice Age, and Ice Age only? What are they doing dragging huge blocks in the middle of a desert? Even the plot is so outdated and lame.

    The only reason I'm giving this a two is because the Sabertooth looked really awesome. Even though it just came out from nowhere, at least they made something out of this huge epic pile of garbage.

    Total waste of money. Compared to Apocalypto - one of the best epics I've seen so far - this movie is nothing.
  • May 21, 2009
    Once upon a time, I wrote a detailed review about this crappy film. Mysteriously, it has disappeared off Flixster. I kind of wish this movie would have disappeared during production. But anyways, here's my review in a nutshell since I can't remember details:

    *ahem*

    This fi

    ...( read more)lm sucks really really bad. It's awful. I say so, 91% of critics say so, and a majority of moviegoers also say so. So if you decide to watch this crapfest after knowing all this, then somebody should pee on you. Thank you, and have a nice day.
  • April 9, 2009
    Two stars are for the sfx only.story is way to dull and its just so boring.Took me 4 go's to watch this on dvd and i wish i never did!Words to mr emmerich is to go back and make those sci-fi,disaters flicks he's good at.......
  • April 7, 2009
    Like Emmerichs previous films, I knew not to expect anything serious, this was gonna be pure popcorn, and its not that bad popcorn either. Emmerich always produces good fun films and this is another good example. The plot is sooooooo very done before haha and the cast are rather ...( read more)hammy and cliched but it all works nicely with the silly story and over the top action. Mostly newcomers by the look of things, afew big names, but generally its a new line up which does work in the films favour, any big shot names in lead roles and it becomes too serious or trying to be serious.

    The effects are nice, not great but it does look good. You can tell its cgi but the vista's and mammoths do look good on the desert landscape. The tribes and costumes are the best, all look very realistic and quite accurate, certainly gives Mel Gibsons Apocalypto a good run for the money.

    There some obvious problems here and there though, what actual time period are we in? Jurassic? Prehistoric? Egyptian?

    The way he kills the almighty at the end is very very daft, and a bloody good shot haha
    The whole sabretooth tiger mini plot is really stupid, the girl coming back to life at the end, and what exactly is so special about her etc...

    There are many bad plot holes and really, its a really daft mix or rip of many other films which is poor really. Its not that much different from his earlier film Stargate. But...at the end of the day its silly and very cheesey but its fun, I just wish they were alittle more accurate with that timeline hehe kinda spoils it cos its so wrong.
  • November 14, 2009
    not to bad. i like it :)
  • November 12, 2009
    go see this now just stop and go see it now !!!!!! got it on boot leg fidallass
  • November 11, 2009
    You have to hand it to him, Roland Emmerich thinks big. After the sci-fi extravaganzas Stargate and Independence Day, the historical epic The Patriot and the environmental disaster flick The Day After Tomorrow, he has set out to create his own mythology, no less. 10,000 BC embroi...( read more)ders the classic coming-of-age, boy-with-a-heroic-destiny legends and lore told around camp fires for millennia with straight-faced, pretentiously sober spirituality, made-up mysticism and reams of voiceover narration (from Omar Sharif). A fiercely good looking, inventively-clad cast interact among dizzying layers of CGI, visual and sound effects to make a preposterous prehistoric adventure quest that is undeniably spectacular. You can feel the earth and your teeth shake, rattle and roll when the mighty herds of massive woolly mamoths stampede through the dwarfed company of vulnerable but athletic spear carriers.

    What is more embarrassingly enjoyable, guilty fun is the brash daftness run rampant. You can laugh at, but still dote on, the invented culture, ritual and poetic utterances (a dying warrior serenely says ?I am full of days.?) of the plucky Stone Agers, who are, of course, highly attuned to the spirit world, signs and portents, and the forces of earth and the heavens.

    The Yagahl tribe (a hunky, dreadlocked lot in hide breeches and clay face packs) revere a crone called Old Mother. She crouches in her hide and bone lean-to speaking to the spirits and going into telepathic trances, suffering shakes and nosebleeds linked to the faraway travails befalling D?Leh (sincere, sinewy Steven Strait) and his handful of companions on their arduous trek on the trail of horse-riding, ship-sailing slavers to a lost civilization of proto-Egyptian meanies. It all takes place in a sort of imaginary Africa, by way of the Alps.

    The Yagahl don?t think much of D?Leh, something of an angst-ridden misfit who has father issues since the disappearance of his own, the leader of the tribe, who seemingly abandoned his people long ago. That?s one mystery that will be solved far, far away and many moons later. When his true love is snatched, however, D?leh resolves to rescue her, accompanied by his sympathetic, sage mentor Tic?Tic (Cliff Curtis), a cheeky boy follower, Baku (British teen Nathanael Baring) and a hot-headed rival for Evelet. And somewhere along the way he grows into a heroic leader of men.

    They don?t have a lot to work with, but one is struck by the quality of our heroes? rough-hewn footwear, which carries D?Leh and his fellowship from freezing mountain tops down into a Pleistocene jungle (where they are beset by 'Terror Birds', killer critters which look, unintentionally hilariously, much like gigantic, enraged ostrich chicks) and across the searing sands of a vast desert (and, eventually, back again.). They rack up more miles than Frodo, in a fraction of the time.
    En route D?Leh bonds with a sabre-toothed tiger (it?s a prophetic sign) like Androcles did with the Lion; invents celestial navigation after wandering lost in the desert like Moses; discovers Agriculture (which will come in very handy for future survival, given the background of climate change) and gathers to himself an impressive variety of beleaguered tribal peoples -- of many tongues, many skin tones and helpfully colour-coded costumery with excellent accessories -- as he goes, creating an army for a terrific climactic uprising at the end of the world.

    Needless to say, Emmerich and like-minded collaborator, co-writer, producer and co-composer Harald Kloser?s vision of things neolithic will have anthropologists, archaeologists and paleontologists rolling in the aisles. Documentary-drama realism this is not. But in its peregrinations from high-altitude camp fire to sophisticated pre-Pharaonic city (where harnessed mammoths helpfully toting the heavy loads offer a startling new hypothesis on how the pyramids were built) this opus happily and shamelessly plucks popular notions from every caveman and loincloth saga ever, from One Million Years B.C. to Apocalypto. There are also touches of Lord Of The Rings, The Thirteenth Warrior and all the spiffing silent screen role models of young men finding their courage and ingenuity; abducted heroines (Belle, although not, alas, given a fur bikini, is a good, comely one; and dastardly, decadent exotic fiends for villains, with terrifyingly long fake fingernails and a taste for human sacrifice. And all this without any nudity, profanity or visceral brutality! It?s really rather sweet.
  • November 11, 2009
    Interesting, but not great. Would not rent again.
  • November 10, 2009
    Day: Saturday
    Date: 8 March 2008
    Amt: 55/-
    Time: 9.45 pm
    Over at: 12.00 am
    With: Ismail
    Theatre: New Empire, Mumbai

    An Unusual Story of Love and Bravery. Outstanding Effects, A larger than life canvas. Though a little drag in between.

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