One Million Years BC – 1966 | 100 mins | Adventure | Colour

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Plot Synopsis

One Million Years B.C.

One Million Years BC was a remake of the 1940 Hal Roach classic One Million Years BC, which had the added box office fillip of being heavily promoted as Hammer’s one-hundredth production. Hammer for once decided to pull all the stops out and hired effects wiz Ray Harryhausen to provide the film with some rather more realistic-looking creatures.

The story is a straightforward prehistoric adventure that pits humans against dinosaurs. In prehistoric times, Loana (Raquel Welch), a young girl from the Shell People falls in love with Tumak (John Richardson, a young man from the Rock People, despite the fact their tribes are at war with each other. Being ostracised is the least of the couple’s worries, surviving earthquakes and attacks by pterodactyls being of greater importance. Freed of all but the most elementary dialogue, the film was a visual treat and one of Hammer’s more pleasing ancient epics.

Production Team

Don Chaffey: Director
Robert Jones: Art Direction
Wilkie Cooper: Cinematography
Carl Toms: Costume Design
Tom Simpson: Editing
Wally Schneiderman: Make-up
Robert J Schiffer: Make-up
Mario Nascimbene: Original Music
Michael Carreras: Producer
Michael Carreras: Script
George Baker: Script
George Blackwell: Special Effects
Ray Harryhausen: Visual Effects

Cast

Raquel Welch: Loana
John Richardson: Tumak
Percy Herbert: Sakana
Robert Brown: Akhoba
Martine Beswick: Nupondi
Jean Wladon: Ahot
Lisa Thomas: Sura
Malya Nappi: Tohana