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Movie Classic: Caveman (1981)
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Author:  Arindel [ Mon Aug 07, 2006 4:43 pm ]
Post subject:  Movie Classic: Caveman (1981)

I know Bill appreciates this movie as much as me. I did a search earlier to find an actor in this movie when I came across this quote in the IMBD. I recall this movie being fairly funny, but this quote makes it seem out of this world good. Perhaps, i missed some of the social implications and just enjoyed it for the fun.

Quote:
Very few films have the capacity to change the way we think and feel about the world around us. This is one of them.

This touching film is about daring caveman Atouk and his brave companion Lar, who are expelled from their tribes, journey through exotic, precambrian lands, learning about the people and world around them. Ultimately they form their own tribe and, more importantly, learn cameraderie, the heart of what it means to be human and to have love. Caught up in the chaos of a savage, ancient world, Atouk and Lar eventually have to struggle just to stay alive.

This movie lost the Best Picture Oscar in 1981, but history will likely remember "Caveman" for much longer. And with more fondness. The cinematography is excellent. Alan Hume's prehistoric world is photographed as a mystical paradise. Then, we see the horror of human greed, lust and cruelty, also stunningly photographed. There is also a nice scene with a bunch of people thrashing about in a large pile of dung. It looked so realistic, that for a moment, I felt like it wasn't a movie, but a documentary.

The acting is top notch, especially early performances from Dennis Quaid, who exposes his buttocks and Barbara Bach, who should have. In one scene, Dennis Quaid makes impressive use of method acting, urinating against a glacier. And Ringo Starr deserved the Oscar he unfairly lost to Dudley Moore that year.

Everyone needs to see this movie at least once. Although it might be a little disturbing, the violence is not gratuitous, the love affairs wistful and heartbreaking. Despite the tragic elements, however, the movie is inspirational. One of the best films to come out of the 80s!

It's underrated films like this that don't get any publicity and the over-rated, pointless films do. I guess that's just the way Hollywood operates. This is one of the saddest, most touching, most unsettling, most moving films I've ever seen. It's one of the best. It nakedly shows the rudimentary nature of humanity, by showing our primal origins, when a fire, meat and the warmth of a lover and support of friends was all that kept us from the brink of death. "Caveman" captures and horrifies the viewer. There is something classical about the plot of "Caveman." If Aeschylus was alive today and making films, he would have made "Caveman."

The vivid imagery and music is outstanding, but the acting and intensity shown is very realistic. This is one of the most harrowing, gripping films I've ever seen, reminding me of so many other films of the era. "Quest for Fire" being one, but "The Killing Fields" being another. "The Killing Fields" is a movie about people who weren't exactly on the front lines, nor are they exceptional warriors. They're everyday people, like you or me, who do what they can to help one another out. "Caveman" is like this.

I can't put my finger on exactly what it is about this film that gets to me so much, but it is THE most haunting, emotional film experience one could hope for.

Excellent performances from the cast. A brilliant score by Lalo Schifrin. Scenes of high emotion, tension, drama, horror and even one or two pieces of light relief, usually involving Shelly Long.

An excellent film. Certainly one of the best foreign films in recent memory, "Caveman" is ripe for a new Director's Cut edition, or perhaps a modern English-version remake featuring John Malkovich. I have only ever seen the original, undubbed and not-subtitled version (I never figured out what language it was -- probably Swedish) and had difficulty with some of the more elaborate dialogues.


Link to IMDB

Author:  dbakke [ Mon Aug 07, 2006 4:51 pm ]
Post subject: 

Two questions:

1) Are you drunk?

2) Is this the one with Daryl Hannah?

Author:  Arindel [ Mon Aug 07, 2006 4:57 pm ]
Post subject: 

dbakke wrote:
Two questions:

1) Are you drunk?

nope, but give me time.
dbakke wrote:
2) Is this the one with Daryl Hannah?

I think that was clan of the cavebear. This is with ringo star, Barbara Bach and Dennis Quaid.

If you had seen the movie, you would understand why I found this quote to be so...wrong.

Author:  Tetran [ Mon Aug 07, 2006 5:28 pm ]
Post subject: 

Ah Caveman....

"doo doo!" "kaa kaa! "sh.t!"

Author:  Cordalis [ Mon Aug 07, 2006 6:47 pm ]
Post subject: 

Did you know Ringo married Barbara Bach? I don't quite find Barbara Bach to be attractive really...I like Shelley Long better.

Author:  Arindel [ Mon Aug 07, 2006 6:52 pm ]
Post subject: 

Cordalis wrote:
Did you know Ringo married Barbara Bach? I don't quite find Barbara Bach to be attractive really...I like Shelley Long better.

Uh, so you're the one...I heard you existed, but alwasy thought it a myth :P

Zug-Zug Lana

Author:  dbakke [ Mon Aug 07, 2006 9:23 pm ]
Post subject: 

question...should i be drunk to watch this movie?

Author:  Sp4ce_Monk3y_2000 [ Mon Aug 07, 2006 9:28 pm ]
Post subject: 

ZUG-ZUG!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Author:  Arindel [ Mon Aug 07, 2006 11:06 pm ]
Post subject: 

dbakke wrote:
question...should i be drunk to watch this movie?

Couldn't hurt.

Just have to be in a stupid mood, and no woman unless she can handle stupid guy humor in large doses.

Author:  Alokorben [ Mon Aug 07, 2006 11:11 pm ]
Post subject: 

OOL!!!!

Author:  X2-PB [ Tue Aug 08, 2006 9:24 am ]
Post subject: 

I could've sworn Caveman was a comedy starring Brendan Fraser about a Caveman who was frozen in a block of ice and revived in the 20th Century.

Author:  Arindel [ Tue Aug 08, 2006 9:53 am ]
Post subject: 

X2-PB wrote:
I could've sworn Caveman was a comedy starring Brendan Fraser about a Caveman who was frozen in a block of ice and revived in the 20th Century.

You guys tend to rename american movies. I recall that when my Dad would rent movies that he hadn;t seen before because he's look at the title and nor read the plot on the back. not all of them change, most of the mainstream movies didn't change, but the so-so ones did.

/shiver...some really bad movies he rented many many times.

you were thinking of a movie called "Encino Man".

Author:  Onto Kracken [ Tue Aug 08, 2006 11:43 am ]
Post subject: 

It's always really hard for me to judge the sarcasm level of all you old dudes. Are we on the same page here? :?:

Author:  Talon1977 [ Tue Aug 08, 2006 11:54 am ]
Post subject: 

Onto Kracken wrote:
It's always really hard for me to judge the sarcasm level of all you old dudes. Are we on the same page here? :?:


It's not just you man. :x what is this place coming to these days???

Author:  dbakke [ Tue Aug 08, 2006 2:08 pm ]
Post subject: 

Juu-nin to-iro

Author:  Arindel [ Tue Aug 08, 2006 2:15 pm ]
Post subject: 

Talon1977 wrote:
Onto Kracken wrote:
It's always really hard for me to judge the sarcasm level of all you old dudes. Are we on the same page here? :?:


It's not just you man. :x what is this place coming to these days???

What page are you on?

I didn't think there was much, if any, sarcasm going on in here
dbakke wrote:
Juu-nin to-iro

can i get a translate on this :?

Author:  Jeger [ Tue Aug 08, 2006 2:48 pm ]
Post subject: 

Best movie ever.

*hits a T-rex in the nads* 8)

Author:  Onto Kracken [ Tue Aug 08, 2006 11:39 pm ]
Post subject: 

The original quote is clearly a sarcastic joke...

Author:  Arindel [ Tue Aug 08, 2006 11:44 pm ]
Post subject: 

Onto Kracken wrote:
The original quote is clearly a sarcastic joke...

Heh, yeah. I thought you meant us.

Author:  Onto Kracken [ Wed Aug 09, 2006 10:49 am ]
Post subject: 

Arindel wrote:
Perhaps, i missed some of the social implications and just enjoyed it for the fun.

It may just be the fact of written communication, but I think the :wink: there would have cleared up my confusion as to how you were viewing the quote. Whatever, anyhow, I haven't seen the movie (that also contributed to my confusion), but any Ringo Starr vehicle sounds like a winner to me. :wink:
I also just realized that I got hit with a Japanese proverb mid-thread. Ten men, ten colors indeed, although I did find the quote amusing, and the references to method acting, Aeschylus, and John Malkovich were pretty much dead give aways that this was a tongue-in-cheek piece.

Author:  dbakke [ Thu Aug 10, 2006 1:21 pm ]
Post subject: 

:lol: different strokes for different folks.

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