Na Austrália, crocodilo superdesenvolvido ataca e causa a morte de muitas pessoas. Mas é defendido com unhas e dentes por um guarda-florestal, porque o animal é considerado sagrado pelos abo... Ler tudoNa Austrália, crocodilo superdesenvolvido ataca e causa a morte de muitas pessoas. Mas é defendido com unhas e dentes por um guarda-florestal, porque o animal é considerado sagrado pelos aborígenes da região.Na Austrália, crocodilo superdesenvolvido ataca e causa a morte de muitas pessoas. Mas é defendido com unhas e dentes por um guarda-florestal, porque o animal é considerado sagrado pelos aborígenes da região.
- Direção
- Roteiristas
- Artistas
- Reynolds
- (as Ken Radley)
Avaliações em destaque
"We born. We die. Spirit lives."
Australia's answer to "Jaws", "Dark Age" is a competently made horror film about a legendary large croc on the rampage. It's not a strong enough title on its own and got lost in the distribution pipeline before its current home video release.
Local color (atmospherically filmed in far north Queensland and Northern Territory) highlights this tall tale of Numunwari, a 25-foot long crocodile held sacred by the aborigines. Storms cause the beastie to head down river and start eating humans.
John Jarratt plays a government ranger who's fighting poachers and trying to save crocs from extinction. Ironically, he's assigned by his government superior to hunt down the big beast, while every amateur hunter in sight uses the emergency as an excuse to declare open season on all crocs.
Aboriginal folklore gives "Dark Age" its own flavor, but too many scenes and plot devices directly ape "Jaws" to cornball effect. The issue of protecting local interests against the adverse publicity of recurring croc attacks, the ultimate 3-man trek (Jarratt and two aborigines) after the beast and a very familiar scene of kids swimming peacefully in a harbor when the croc arrives to attack lack originality.
Jarratt is an appealing hero, with the lovely Nikki Coghill effective as an anthropologist and romantic interest. Burnam Burnam is solid as the aboriginal elder, supported ably by David Gulpilil.
Director Arch Nicholson (of HBO's Rachel Ward-starrer "Fortress") has a topflight technical team, but the killer croc's fake look doesn't help to generate scares or suspense.
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesAfter fourteen years, on October 5th 2011, the film was released for the first time on home video in its home country of Australia with a DVD release from Umbrella Entertainment. The company later released a Blu-Ray edition in 2017. The film prior to this time had only had a few limited individual screenings in Australia such as one organized by Quentin Tarantino in 2009 in Sydney.
- Citações
Rex Garret: Now you give me one good reason why crocodiles should be protected. Just one!
Steve Harris: One good reason? For 200 million years there's been a croc-like-animal... they were here at the time of the dinosaurs. For 200 million years! And we've taken them to the brink of extinction in 20.
- ConexõesFeatured in Além de Hollywood: O Melhor do Cinema Australiano (2008)
Principais escolhas
- How long is Dark Age?Fornecido pela Alexa
Detalhes
Bilheteria
- Orçamento
- AU$ 4.800.000 (estimativa)