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The People That Time Forgot

The People That Time Forgot – 1977
FIRST ‘The Land That Time Forgot’. THEN ‘At The Earth’s Core’. NOW a fantastic incredible world of savage mystery…
Director
Kevin Connor

Writers
Edgar Rice Burroughs novel
Patrick Tilley

Producers
Samuel Z. Arkoff executive producer
John Dark producer
Steve Previn executive producer
Max Rosenberg producer

Cast
Patrick Wayne – Maj. Ben McBride
Doug McClure – Bowen Tyler
Sarah Douglas – Lady Charlotte Cunningham
Dana Gillespie – Ajor
Thorley Walters – Dr. Edwin Norfolk
Shane Rimmer – Hogan
Tony Britton – Capt. Lawton
John Hallam – Chung-Sha
David Prowse – Executioner (as Dave Prowse)
Milton Reid – Sabbala
Kiran Shah – Bolum
Richard LeParmentier – Lt. Whitby (as Richard Parmentier)
Jimmy Ray – Lt. Graham
Tony McHale – Telegraphist

Review by Theo Robertson

Better Than I Remembered,
I first saw THE PEOPLE THAT TIME FORGOT in the early 1980s and as a sequel to the fondly remembered THE LAND THAT TIME FORGOT I was very disappointed in it . Having seen it again over 20 years later I do realise that it’s a very flawed movie/sequel but it’s not without some value.

Many of the problems are to do with the slow first half . We the audience know that the travellers are going to be meeting giant rubber dinosaurs but these rubber puppets aren’t used to their real potential and the only sequence I can recall from over 20 years ago was when the pterodactyl smashed into the plane . What probably makes the sequence stick out in my memory is that this is one of the few times that a dinosaur does anything really bad in the movie but I guess that’s because this isn’t really a monster movie at all.

The movie is far more similar to a half forgotten Hammer adventure film called THE LAST CONTINENT rather than a sequel to THE LAND THAT TIME FORGOT , it’s an adventure story featuring a lost kingdom and you can’t help thinking that perhaps the story was once intended to be an original screenplay since Doug McClure’s character seems to have been resurrected to kick off the plot but he’s not given much to do and his role is even more superfluous than that of Charlton Heston in BENEATH THE PLANET OF THE APES a film not a million miles removed from this one

The film does improve in the second half as the expedition comes across a kingdom of pseudo Samuri warriors even if does lead to some plot holes , I can understand the concept of parallel evolution but why would this only apply to one race and not the others . Think about it: One race in this lost land has the culture and technology of 16th century Japan but everyone else seems to be living in the stone age . Credible ? Probably not ( Was it just an excuse to have a busty red head run around not wearing much ? ) but it’s not really a credible movie.

It is a fairly entertaining one though and better than I remembered from a couple of decades ago . The fact that you don’t need to have seen the prequel is both a strength and weakness for THE PEOPLE THAT TIME FORGOT but it stands firmly on its own hind legs for a non discerning audience

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A tour through the great and not so great films of the seventies The seventies saw a huge change in styles and genres from the advent of the slasher horror movies like Halloween and the blockbuster summers films started by Jaws. More...

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