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IMDbPro

Violence et sexe aux temps préhistoriques

Original title: Creatures the World Forgot
  • 1971
  • PG
  • 1h 35m
IMDb RATING
4.5/10
1.2K
YOUR RATING
Violence et sexe aux temps préhistoriques (1971)
Official Trailer
Play trailer2:13
1 Video
99+ Photos
AdventureFantasy

In prehistoric times, two brothers fight each other for the leadership of their tribe.In prehistoric times, two brothers fight each other for the leadership of their tribe.In prehistoric times, two brothers fight each other for the leadership of their tribe.

  • Director
    • Don Chaffey
  • Writer
    • Michael Carreras
  • Stars
    • Julie Ege
    • Tony Bonner
    • Robin John
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    4.5/10
    1.2K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Don Chaffey
    • Writer
      • Michael Carreras
    • Stars
      • Julie Ege
      • Tony Bonner
      • Robin John
    • 29User reviews
    • 22Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos1

    Creatures the World Forgot
    Trailer 2:13
    Creatures the World Forgot

    Photos103

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    Top cast39

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    Julie Ege
    Julie Ege
    • Nala - The Girl
    Tony Bonner
    Tony Bonner
    • Toomak - The 'Fair' Boy
    Robin John
    • Rool - The 'Dark' Boy
    • (as Robert John)
    Brian O'Shaughnessy
    Brian O'Shaughnessy
    • Mak - The Father
    • (as Brian O'Shaughnessey)
    Sue Wilson
    • Noo - The Mother
    Rosalie Crutchley
    Rosalie Crutchley
    • The Old Crone
    Marcia Fox
    • The Dumb Girl
    Gerard Bonthuys
    • Young Toomak
    Hans Kiesouw
    • Young Rool
    Josje Kiesouw
    • The Young Dumb Girl
    Beverly Blake
    • The Young Female Lover
    • (as Beverley Blake)
    Doon Baide
    • The Young Male Lover
    Don Leonard
    • The Old Leader
    Frank Hayden
    • Zen - The Murderer
    Rosita Moulan
    • The Tribal Dancer
    Fred Swart
    • The Marauder Leader
    Ken Hare
    • The Leader of the Fair Tribe
    Audrey Allen
    • Rock Mother
    • (uncredited)
    • Director
      • Don Chaffey
    • Writer
      • Michael Carreras
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews29

    4.51.1K
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    Featured reviews

    5kellybranson

    Great time had by all who starred in it.

    This is a great little film, Shot in Africa 32 years ago it brings back great memories for its star and my personal friend Tony Bonner........ who cares if they don't speak! Do they really have to?????????? Looking like that!!!!!
    lor_

    It was impressive in first-run

    One of my sci-fi/horror/fantasy reviews written 50 years ago: Directed by Don Chaffey. Produced by Michael Carreras for Hammer Films; Released by Columbia Pictures. Screenplay by Michael Carreras; Photographed by Vincent Cox; Edited by Chris Barnes; Music by Mario Nascimbene; Assistant Director: Ferdinand Fairfax. Starring Julie Ege, Tony Bonner, Robert John, Brian O'Shaughnessy, Rosalie Crutchley, Marcia Fox, Doon Baide, Sue Wilson, Gerard Bonthuys, Don Leonard, Ken Hare and Fred Swart.

    Prehistoric tribes on the loose grunting their way across Africa, facing mini-cataclysm and indulging in non-stop savagery. In a "2001"-ish Dawn of Man mode, their customs are delineated well, although their beliefs in the supernatural and their origins are handled crudely. The big difference: no oversize creatures appear in this one other than a big grizzly bear.
    6Hey_Sweden

    Good entertainment for fans of prehistoric cinema.

    Hammer follows up their earlier Stone Age features "One Million Years B.C." and "When Dinosaurs Ruled the Earth" with another epic about primitive man. As written by veteran Hammer producer & writer (and sometime director) Michael Carreras, it's not STRONG on story but is relatively easy to understand and take. There is nothing in the way of dialogue as we typically understand it; all the cave dudes and gals speak in grunts only.

    Basically, the story can be simplified as thus: a power struggle between a "fair" caveman (Tony Bonner, "Quigley Down Under") and a "dark" one (Robin John), as they fight for control of a tribe. Assorted other tribesmen and women are played by the likes of Brian O'Shaughnessy ("The Gods Must Be Crazy"), Sue Wilson, Rosalie Crutchley ("The Haunting" '63), and Marcia Fox ("Old Dracula").

    The performances are generally amusing. Bonner and John are fun as the macho opponents, as is Crutchley in what basically amounts to a "Stone Age witch doctor" role. The guys often take centre stage, although it's Norwegian sexpot Julie Ege ("The Seven Brothers Meet Dracula") that's top billed. She and Fox make for very fine eye candy, but they're never as in the foreground as the advertising would have you believe.

    Accompanied by atmospheric music by Mario Nascimbene, who also did the score for those other pictures, the movie is attractively shot by Vincent G. Cox on various Namibia and South Africa locations (with some studio work as well). Much of its "creatures" are animals living today, with the exception of a goofy man-in-a-costume thing seen in a cave sequence.

    While this isn't as effective overall as Hammers' previous forays into the genre, it still makes for some agreeable entertainment. It IS fairly realistic, however: at no point do humans share the screen with dinosaurs.

    Six out of 10.
    5BA_Harrison

    It's like One Million Years B.C. but with most of the good bits removed.

    Their home destroyed by a volcanic eruption, a tribe of dark-haired cave-people cross the land looking for somewhere safe to put down roots. Along the way, they meet a tribe of friendly blonde cave-people, who are happy to share their women. Not one to say 'No' to a hot blonde, Mak (Brian O'Shaughnessy), chief of the dark-haired people, sires two boys: blonde Toomak and dark-haired Rool. On the same day, another baby is born: a dumb girl who is almost sacrificed, but who is saved by the tribe's shamen (Rosalie Crutchley). Toomak and Rool grow up as rivals vying for their father's attention. When Mak is killed by a yak (or some such beast), it is the blonde son who is chosen as his successor, leaving the bitter Rool to try and seize leadership...

    Rather than feature cavemen versus dinosaurs, as in One Million Years B.C. and When Dinosaurs Ruled The Earth, this final prehistoric offering from Hammer takes a more realistic route -- if Julie Ege as a sexy cavewoman can be called realistic. Unfortunately, without the spectacle of an Allosaurus terrorising humans, or a bikini babe being carried off by a Pterodactyl, and with the dialogue between the cave-people consisting of lots of grunting, the film quickly becomes a bore.

    To try and compensate for the plodding nature of his screenplay, director Don Chaffey loads his film with bums (from both sexes) and boobs, with Ege eventually making her entrance as Toomak's mate Nala, but even scantily clad cave-people cannot prevent Creatures the World Forgot from being a slog almost as arduous as that undertaken by Mak and his people. Not very exciting highlights include young Toomak catching a porcupine and a pig, a fight with a cave bear (played by a man in an unconvincing bear costume), a battle with some cannibals, and Ege being attacked by a big snake while Toomak and Rool fight to the death (although Rool is eventually stabbed by the dumb girl, his body falling off a cliff, looking all too much like an immobile shop dummy).

    Oh well, at least the scenery is nice.

    Disney fans N.B.: Mak presents the newborn Toomak to his tribe in a scene remarkably similar to that of Rafiki holding up Simba in The Lion King. Moreover, Nala is the name of both Toomak's woman and Simba's love interest. Coincidence? Who knows?
    8yolt13

    Highly Underrated!

    CREATURES is a blast! It eschews the stop-motion dinosaurs of ONE MILLION YEARS BC and WHEN DINOSAURS RULED THE EARTH and concentrates on the struggles of primitive men in a bleak, prehistoric world. Despite the smirking ad campaign and much-ballyhooed adult rating, CREATURES spends far less time than its predecessors showcasing the anatomical blessings of its female cast members and places more emphasis on the brutality of early man's daily life. The girls are certainly an eyeful, but they are nowhere near as groomed or glamorous as Raquel Welch or Victoria Vetri.

    The film stands out in many ways. There is no opening narration and no dialogue to speak of. Instead of using the gibberish language of the earlier films, the "Creatures" say very little, grunting and gesturing to communicate with one another. The solid performances make this surprisingly effective. The movie also inverts the formula established by its predecessors, moving the requisite cataclysmic volcanic eruption to the beginning and letting the human drama dominate the climax. This unusual structure lends extra weight to the finale.

    I went in wondering how grunting cavemen(even the curvy kind like Julie Ege!) could hold my attention for 90 minutes without dinosaurs to fight. To my joy, the film is actually quite entertaining. The birth, life and struggle of two brothers vying for leadership of the tribe has an almost Biblical quality, and director Chaffey gives us plenty of fighting and conflict with nature to keep the film moving. Though much of the story consists of the tribe traveling from one fight to another, I found myself caught up in their journey and never once got bored. I don't know any of Don Chaffey's other work, but ONE MILLION YEARS BC and CREATURES THE WORLD FORGOT have convinced me that the man knows how to tell a story.

    Bottom line? It's a caveman movie. If that ain't your bag, you probably won't like it. But if you can watch the other two Hammer prehistoric movies without fast-forwarding to the dinosaur scenes, you'll probably find CREATURES THE WORLD FORGOT a very pleasant surprise!

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    • Trivia
      Julie Ege had just given birth to her daughter, Joanna Kruger-Monsen (born in 1969), and was not feeling well, so she went to bed early during one shoot. As a result, the crew mistakenly thought that she was stuck-up and decided to keep her out of view as much as possible, much to the annoyance of Hammer Films in London. In fact, in an interview, Ege mentioned that she thought that the cameraman hated her for some reason, but she did not know why.
    • Connections
      Featured in Cinemacabre TV Trailers (1993)

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    FAQ13

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • September 27, 1972 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Language
      • None
    • Also known as
      • Creatures the World Forgot
    • Filming locations
      • South Africa(jungle scenes with animals, namely antelope, oryx, wildebeest, warthog, brown hyena, African crested porcupine, snakes and a scorpion)
    • Production company
      • Hammer Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 1h 35m(95 min)
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.66 : 1(original ratio)
      • 1.85 : 1

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