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Year of Capture and Release: 1957 |
Thinking it would be on par with the aesthetic value of BLACK LAGOON and
REVENGE OF THE CREATURE, producer William Alland's topnotch director,
Jack Arnold, who also shot TARANTULA, wanted nothing to do with this
cheapie that, in the rudimentary stages, was supposed to be colorized
with semi-big stars attached...
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Paperback-Approach Poster Art |
But with a nice matte as a primal mileau, it's enough to convince both an audience and a small group of
Arctic dwelling researchers, with their military-trained employees
including a magazine-handsome helicopter pilot in future FBI
television-show regular William Reynolds...
Along for the ride is his everyman mechanic; a
pretty blond ingenue; and, conveniently enough, a leading man who's more
an expert on prehistoric history than the snowy region surrounding this
strange and UNKNOWN tropical enigma, partially based on a true story about a mass of warm
water discovered strangely in the middle of the frozen Antarctic — and the very same location
for that year's b-creature THE DEADLY MANTIS... Indeed, producer Alland was a busy man in 1957...
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LAND Score: ***1/2 |
The warm water's explained quickly, derived from a volcano, and the
Dino-land follows, a hell-hot purgatory the characters are trapped in.
The helicopter
can start but without taking flight – this following a
quick, eerie sighting: the swoop of a pterodactyl starts the ball
rolling, or rather, the helicopter falling...
Then, within this extremely hot and humid valley, resembling the
wide-shot background of any Tarzan film, the foursome's hunted by
various dinosaurs: The good ones look wonderfully fake, like a
water-creature hybrid of The Loch Ness Monster and the aquatic man-eating dino in
KING KONG. And especially the T-Rex, with a mouth that opens wide and
awkward, like a large parade float or a Halloween mask giving enough
room for the person to breath...
For it is, like GODZILLA, a man-suited
beast instead of the larger budgeted stop-motion. And on the other side
of the coin are the lame, cheap Dinosaurs that are, ironically, the
most realistic — in fact, they
are real: Gila Monsters (or
Iguanas) superimposed to look giant in the fashion of, say, Bert I.
Gordon. But enlarged rats, ants and humans work better since they become
an immense version of a normal size we're already familiar with...
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What turns out to be the most determined beastie on board |
So the coolest scenes involve survival but from the T-Rex's danger, and
eventually a bearded Scientist gone wacko from having been abandoned
there a decade earlier: Lustfully woebegone with primal determination,
he's forcefully willing to exchange an important gear (from his own
wreck) that could fix their copter in exchange for the girl to be his Tarzan's Jane...
But not if the leading man, who doesn't stop rambling speeches about
evolution long enough to become a worthy action hero, can help it. He's
initially trumped by that dashing pilot who starts out cocky with
perilous potential only to wind up, like his stressed-out mechanic,
serving as wallpaper behind the two leads, including blonde starlet
Shirley Patterson, who fits the best as she was no stranger to b-movies:
A bonafide creature genre scream queen who, at one point, begs her brainy love interest to "Stop Lecturing!"
Too bad for them, and even worse for us, he doesn't shut his trap.
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The Dinosaurs in William Alland's b-adventure THE LAND UNKNOWN |
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The Dinosaurs in William Alland's b-adventure THE LAND UNKNOWN |
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The Dinosaurs in William Alland's b-adventure THE LAND UNKNOWN |
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