Notes: Universal
International.
Produced by Fairway Productions (who also did The Blob). 85
minutes.
Produced: Jack H. Harris
Bart Thompson: Ward Ramsey
Betty Piper: Kristina Hanson
Chuck: Paul Lukather
Neanderthal: Gregg Martell
Julio: Alan Roberts
Mike Hacker: Fred Engelberg
Dumpy: Wayne C. Tredway
O'Leary: James Logan
Chica: Luci Blain
Jasper: Jack Younger
Mousey: Howard Dayton
Directed: Irvin S. Yeaworth, Jr.
Screenplay: Dan E. Weisburd and Jean Yeaworth
Special Effects: Tim Baar, Wah Chang, Gene Warren
Music: Ronald Stein
Summary: In
an effort to enlarge the harbor of a Caribbean island, Bart Thompson
and his American construction team (especially the rather heavyset
man known as Dumpy) sets off underwater explosions which seem
to open up a subterranean river. Betty rows along, nearly getting
blown up, and then dives for her lost picnic basket. Bart follows,
rescuing Betty when she faints underwater at the sight of a large
frozen dinosaur head.
After some hostility between Bart and the local
island manager, Mike Hacker, the construction team uses a crane
to haul ashore two frozen carcasses, a tyrannosaur and a brontosaur,
"perfectly preserved," which keep getting mentioned
as "a million years old." Irish stereotype Mr. O'Leary
is put in drunken charge of watching these from his hut during
a rainstorm while Betty and Bart visit the one restaurant on the
island. Hacker discovers a frozen Neanderthal which washed ashore,
and stashes the body in the bushes, hoping to make money off American
scientists.
At the restaurant, Julio, the young ward of
Hacker and obnoxious pain-in-the-ass in his own right, unforgivably
interrupts drinks: "Oh, these are my monsters I got for my
cereal box tops. I thought I'd bring them over to show you.
This one's the brontosaurus. He's a vegetarian. He wouldn't
hurt you unless you got in his way and he stepped on you. But
this one's the mean one. The tyrannosaurus. He's got a bigger
brain and a bigger appetite. He eats meat, and he likes to eat
brontosaurus, even better than people." Hacker finds Julio
slacking off and smashes these toys underfoot. Meanwhile, lightning
splinters and hits both dinosaurs (quel Frankenstein!). Their
mouths smoke. O'Leary drinks and sees the revived Neanderthal.
Eventually the reanimated tyrannosaur eats O'Leary.
The exploding hut brings the rest to where
only tracks remain. The phones are knocked out by the storma
and Bart realizes that they should get the islanders to a ruined
fortress to avoid the "big hungry flesh-eating dinosaur."
A couple islanders are crushed in a van (not the "crowded
bus" mentioned on the video box which is "crushed like
an eggshell!"). The Neanderthal at the window of a house
scares away a woman, enters the house, and is puzzled by a ham
radio, wax fruit, books, a flush toilet, and other items. He
snatches an ax.
Julio meets the brontosaur, nervously saying,
"Remember, you're the friendly vegetarian like it says on
the box." He tells the bronto to run away when the tyrannosaur
approaches. He then enter's Betty's house, meets the Neanderthal,
and helps the two of them to food. Hacker intrudes on Julio's
attempt to teach silverware use, and the Neanderthal throws a
pie in Hacker's face. The two escape and end up riding the bronto.
Betty sees this, runs after Julio, and is picked up by the tyrannosaur
until the Neanderthal axes its foot and catches Betty when she
drops. In some lair, the Neanderthal signals to Betty that she
should cook his rabbit carcass on a stick. She says, "I
hope you don't have anything else on your mind." When Julio
throws rocks at the tyrannosaur, the Neanderthal rescues him and
returns to the cave.
The T-rex fights the bronto and bites its neck,
but heads after the human(oid)s in the cave. Bart and Dumpy try
throwing Molotov cocktails, but these don't work. "Maybe
if I could pop one right into his mouth. . . ." This works
better, while the bronto sinks in quicksand. Hacker arrives and
shoots the Neanderthal in the arm, causing a cave-in. The Neanderthal
holds up a beam so that the others can get out, and he and Hacker
are killed under rocks. Bart offers Julio a half-assed explanation
that the Neanderthal didn't want to live in this strange time.
The islanders mosey to the fortress, but the
oil-filled moat will allow only a few minutes of protection if
the tyrannosaur attacks. So when it does, Bart runs to a derrick
and battles the animal with the shovel mechanism. "Dumpy,
if you've ever prayed, do it now." A good smack knocks the
dinosaur off a cliff into the ocean. And we end with thoughts
of waking up in the future--the 21st century--which Julio will
do someday (without being frozen, unfortunately).
Commentary:
The film was made in Scandinavia, but that's no excuse.
In addition to the torch-in-mouth syndrome again, most bizarre
is Julio's speech: "Oh, these are my monsters I got for my
cereal box tops. I thought I'd bring them over to show you.
This one's the brontosaurus. He's a vegetarian. He wouldn't
hurt you unless you got in his way and he stepped on you. But
this one's the mean one. The tyrannosaurus. He's got a bigger
brain and a bigger appetite. He eats meat, and he likes to eat
brontosaurus, even better than people."
The last syntactical ambiguity (even better
than eating people? even better than people like eating brontosaurus?)
obscures the stranger assertion that humans are an option on dino
menus. But the entire speech also seems to imply its own offensive
evolutionary hierarchy: the bigger the brain (read intelligence,
although this is bunk), the more meat-based the diet, and the
more aggressive. I'll only buy the last two as connected.