The Land That Time Forgot (1975)
Directed by Kevin Connor
Based on the story by Edgar Rice Burroughs
Doug McClure
John McEnery
Keith Barron
Susan Penhaligon
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Here, I get to continue my task of reviewing Amicus Films, and simultaneously revisiting old and obscure dinosaur movies. From the mind of Edgar Rice Boroughs comes a story set during WWI and encompasses the mystery of the Antarctic, specifically a mythological island, Caprona, and what lies beyond its hostile shoreline. Boroughs pictured an unwelcoming fortress that hides inland secrets, perhaps even the secrets of time itself. I had read some Edgar Rice Burroughs books when I was a young lad but can’t remember a lot of specifics. So I’m not sure if this is a good adaptation, but the high drama and action early in the film certainly reflects good writing.
The story begins with a man throwing a bottle with a message in it into the sea. This bottle travels until it eventually reaches a narrator, who then reads the manuscript and sets the story in motion. It begins with the survivors of a destroyed British merchant ship coming upon the surfacing U-Boat that had sunk them. When the Germans open the hatches, the survivors overtake the commander and take over the vessel. The survivors consist of two Americans, Bowen Tyler (Doug McClure), and Lisa Clayton (Susan Penhaligon), a biologist, along with a handful of British crew from the Merchant Ship.
After some cat & mouse battles for control of the sub, Tyler realizes they are lost in Antarctica, low on fuel and supplies. He convinces the German commander, Captain von Schoenvorts that they should work together in order to survive. They come across a legendary island of Caprona and find an underwater cavern streaming warm, fresh water and plant life. Tyler, with the help of the Captian, navigates the sub through the tight twisted caverns in a visually and dramatically intense scene. Coming out the other side they are in a tropical land with lush vegetation and numerous forms of life.
In this hidden land kept warm by volcanic activity, they discover dinosaurs; a Mosasaurus, a Plesiosaur, a Diplodocus, a Pterodactyl, two Allosaurus, and two Styracosaurus. There is also a prehistoric amphibian, Ichthyostega. Later in the film a Triceratops and a Ceratosaurus fight a bloody battle. I give the film kudos for using a wide variety of prehistoric animals. They also discover oil and the crew rigs parts from the sub to set up a primitive refinery. They battle cavemen and even befriend one. In the end the German officer, Dietz outsmarts the Brits and leave Tyler and Lisa on the island. However, their getaway is foiled by the erupting volcanic activity and the struggle with the Brits on the vessel.
Special effects in the 1970s were going through a transitional stage. Puppetry and animatronics became more cost effective and feasible than stop-motion and made it possible for actors to interact with monsters in real time. The puppettronics and special effects in The Land that Time Forgot range from decent to very puppet-looking to funky rubber appendages being thrust into the actor’s faces. Most of the dinosaur work was done by FX-man, Roger Dicken animating his rod puppets in scale jungle scenes. Despite the drawbacks, I still enjoy the dinosaur interpretations in the film. In some scenes you can see the carnivorous dinosaurs drool. Animatronics and robotics would take over special FX in the next few years with award winning creature designs such as Alien. However, they could never get Dinosaurs exactly right; not until they were able to combine it with CGI some 25 years later in Jurassic Park. To me it’s interesting to see the early evolution of these mechanical FX techniques.
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Fun Facts
Roger Dicken also worked on Alien, The Creeping Flesh, The Blood Beast Terror, Thunderbirds Are Go, Warlords of Atlantis and When Dinosaurs Ruled the Earth.
The Land That Time Forgot was remade in 2009 with CGI dinos and with little similarities to the book. Produced by Asylum Pictures.
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See more Amicus Films reviews at the Amicus Films Overview page
See more Dinosaur Movies reviews at the Dinosaur Films Overview page
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Wow, I have not seen this (I have only seen Amicus anthologies), but I definitely like those dinosaurs better than the Thunderbirds Are Go puppets.
Ah, I have a soft spot for the Thunderbirds because I used to watch them every morning before school. I think they were wooden puppets like Rankin/Bass. He did create that weird giant skeleton for The Creeping Flesh, which was cool.
These films were gold. I have a bunch of them and it might be time to break them out and give them another view.
A PERFETCT weekend movie if you ask me!
Hey Marko, thanks for stopping by – good to hear from you. Yeah, great flick for a rainy day!
Oh man, Mike, this post is all kinds of awesome, bro. I LOVE this movie to no end. One of my favorite Saturday matinee movies as a kid. Love the behind the scenes pic and photos. I am still a very big fan of these movies (I even kind of liked the sequel) and the FX used in them. The movie poster is also wicked.
Nice work all around on this one, Mike. Kudos 🙂
Yeah, review for the sequel is coming up 🙂
Nice!
Actually saw this in a theater when I was a kid!
I did too when I was about 10 yrs. Old 🙂
A fun read – and a great Allosaurus gif!
Thanks Ken, I know you guys on the FB Vintage Dinosaur group are quite knowledgeable about dinosaur films, if you ever see anything in a review that is not exactly right, please let me know so I can correct it. 🙂
I haven’t seen this since I was a child. For some reason, I thought this movie was from the ’60s. I didn’t know it was from 1975. I wouldn’t mind checking this out again.
Its a decent movie for the time, if you like dino flicks.
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