10,000 B.C Box Office Review

18.3.08

10,000 B.C Box Office Review
Roland Emmerich has developed a reputation for broad-based action epics, characteristic of large bombs and small in nature. While 10,000 BC, is a victim of the same weaknesses as his other films, his head and shoulders above them.

Unlike other films in the genre regularly kitschy caveman, Roland Emmerich, about the "myth of age, and heroes," takes itself so seriously it forsakes cause mood. Some aspects of security and almost Marxist culmination of an impressive, if curious fashion. The mere spectacle film makes it easier to sell on the big screen than on the DVD, though editing does feel oddly segmented, and if, in accordance with the comfortable advertising.

D 'Leh (Steve Strait) Evolet fell in love with, "The Blue-Eyed Girl" (Camilla Belle) in the lives of young people. As part of a series of activities that appeared to be destined for more than happenstance, Evolet theft by nomads on horseback. These "four legged demons are to achieve gains fist unadulterated Western cultures. Presumably (subject to continental drift), D 'Leh and his supporters on foot from South America to Egypt to get their stolen compatriots. As they go, they come to the knee after knee, which had been deprived of their families. Strangely, chaste, slave drivers kill dissidents, theft docile and get the hell of Dodge. (No robbery or rape Object.) D 'Leh has shown its ability to manage and finds its way into many legendary and ineffable circumstances, in the end, it is headed by a large army of men from various tribes, inciting slave revolution and the overthrow of false gods who mesmerizes and oppresses them.

----------------
Distributed by: Warner Bros.
Cast: Steven Strait, Camilla Bell, Cliff Curtis, and Omar Sharif
Director: Roland Emmerich
Screenwriter: Roland Emmerich and Harald Kloser
Producer: Roland Emmerich, Mark Gordon and Michael Wimer
------------------

This film is so riddled with anachronisms destined to be a drinking game for anthropologists. For the majority (who, like me, can be remembered, $ 20 worth College anthro) historical inaccuracies are comical, but otherwise safe. At times, those uncomfortable places like pure, unintentional camp, which is contrary to the agenda of the film, and does take time away from you, but, as it is in the way you can be? At one point, the hunter / warriors suffer attacks gigantic predatory dodo / poultry-fire correct example of how poor logic in the film. In fact, you can not call this a paint-on-numbers predictable melodrama, because it will have to be such a natural follow the logic. The film will sweep you into a world legend from the outset and any effective sojourns in the history of human civilization are only incidental. If it is a history lesson you want, you have to do better than to go looking for it in the Sunday comics BC

In the slave-driving easterners and 300 - inspired battle sequence segments from 10000 BC come shockingly close to making a comment about the nature of war. Nevertheless, in favor of opiates, such as the quality of myth, in fact, we never go into the matter. The overthrow of self-proclaimed god, and the contradictions in different (if connected) prophecy may have bordered contradictions, but they do not. Combining many less developed tribes to stop advanced civilization from being a superpower bully-cum-it is very easy to read as political commentary, but it is not. In fact, Emmerich evenly eschews all aspects of communication solutions, which could film his courage, value and meaning. I take it back: Meaning a history lesson can be found here.

10,000 B.C Box Office Review
source boxoffice.com, at box office review

0 Comments: