Prehistoric Women (1967 film)
{{short description|1967 film by Michael Carreras}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=February 2022}}
{{Use British English|date=August 2012}}
{{Infobox film
| name = Prehistoric Women
| image = Prehistwomen.jpg
| caption = UK DVD cover
| director = Michael Carreras
| producer = Michael Carreras
| writer = Henry Younger
| starring = Martine Beswick
Michael Latimer
Carol White
Steven Berkoff
| music = Carlo Martelli
| cinematography = Michael Reed
| editing = Roy Hyde
| studio = Hammer Film Productions
Seven Arts
| distributor = Warner-Pathé Distributors
| released = {{Film date|1967|01|25|US|1968|07|20|UK|df=y}}
| runtime = 91 minutes (US)
74 minutes (UK)
| language = English
| country = United Kingdom
}}
Prehistoric Women is a British fantasy adventure film directed by Michael Carreras, starring Martine Beswick and Michael Latimer.{{Cite web |title=Slave Girls |url=https://collections-search.bfi.org.uk/web/Details/ChoiceFilmWorks/150043007 |access-date=28 October 2023 |website=British Film Institute Collections Search}} It was first released in the US in 1967, and released in the UK 18 months later under the title Slave Girls, where it was trimmed by 17 minutes and played as the supporting feature to The Devil Rides Out (1968).
Plot
{{Quote box|align=left|width=40%|quote=A jungle guide time travels to an era of evil brunettes with blonde slaves.|source=Turner Classic Movies''{{cite web |title=Prehistoric Women |url=https://www.tcm.com/tcmdb/title/4796/prehistoric-women#overview |website=Turner Classic Movies |access-date=24 February 2025}}}}
British explorer David Marchant, Colonel Hammond and a guide are pursuing a wounded leopard on an African safari. David decides to find the beast and put it out of its misery before nightfall.
Walking some way, he passes various trees with a picture of a white rhino, but ignores them. The leopard attacks him and he shoots it dead, whereupon David is ambushed and captured by a primitive tribe. They accuse him of disturbing the spirit of the white rhinoceros and take him to their leader's temple. As the high priest makes his decision, David notices a large, ancient stone statue of a white rhino and realizes this is what the tribe worship. Interested, David reaches out to touch it. Just as he is about to be killed for his trespassing and disturbing the spirits, David touches the statue and there is a flash of lightning that opens a giant crack in the cave wall. David flees through it.
David finds himself in a lush paradise jungle within a large valley. He hears a noise and encounters a terrified blonde woman. David tries to help her, but the woman runs off. David follows her, but they are both attacked by dark-haired women. David is escorted with them to their village, while the blonde woman is bound and taken with them. As they reach the outskirts, David is astounded to discover another white rhino statue.
Entering the settlement, David finds that the blonde women serve the dark-haired women, who themselves are ruled by the beautiful, dark-haired Queen Kari, who immediately takes an interest in David and chooses him as her mate, but he is appalled by her cruelty and spurns her advances. Angered, Kari orders her guards to throw David into a windowless cell. Coming to his senses, David finds the same woman he encountered earlier, revealing her name as Saria. When David asks if Saria's people have ever fought back, she replies that Kari is protected by the Devils, the guardians shielding the people from the "cruel world outside". In return, one of the blonde women must be taken as a thanksgiving for protection.
David is moved to where the other men are, in a cave and now living in fear of Kari. At mealtime, an elder tells David of how it all began; their ancestors moved into the area and hunted the white rhino to extinction. This done, they erected a false image to convince others that they still existed. In doing so, they offended their gods, and the legend of the white rhino was born. The elder explains they were sent a tribe of "dark people", who came to this land seeking protection, but instead they enslaved them. The only protection Saria's people had was the lie that the white rhino protected them, until a slave girl escaped and told them of the lie. As a result, the men were enslaved and the slave girl was made their queen, Kari. The tribe will only become bonded by the spirit again when the false idol is destroyed.
As time passes, a "Devil" chooses Saria as the next bride of the white rhino. David urges the men to join forces with the blonde women against the dark people. Escaping, the men disrupt the ceremony as the rhino-masked "Devil" is about to take Saria. David jumps the "Devil" and unmasks him as an African man. David frees Saria as more rhino-masked "Devils" emerge from the jungle, but the men and allied women pursue them, unaware they do not know the jungle as well as they do. A battle breaks out between the two tribes in the jungle. Kari sets out through the battle to kill David. Suddenly, there is an almighty roar and both tribes see a white rhino. Despite Kari telling the tribes it is their god, the beast charges and impales the false idol, Kari. The creature begins to drive out the "Devils" and disappears into the jungle.
David takes Kari's white rhino brooch and offers it to Saria, who then refuses it, saying that the "Devils" will not be returning. She goes on to say that the legend is partly fulfilled and she heads over to the white rhino statue. David tells her that he will not leave her, despite Saria telling him that her world is not his. David confesses his love for Saria, but she moves away and tells David that her love for him will always remain. She leaves David alone in the rain, along with the statue of the white rhino. As if hypnotized, David touches the white rhino's horn as lightning strikes.
In an instant, David is back in the high priest's temple just as they are about to proclaim judgment over him. Suddenly the white rhino statue begins to break and crumble to pieces. The priest joyfully announces that the legend of the white rhino is true and that they are free at last. The priest then orders the destruction of the "false idol's temple", whilst David discreetly leaves and joins the guide, who has been waiting for him.
Once back at the camp, David wonders whether it really was a dream or he had really travelled back in time to reunite a lost African tribe and end a million-year-old legend. As he cleans himself, he discovers the white rhino brooch in his pocket. David is then asked to greet some people from London. To his amazement, one of the guests is the spitting image of Saria. The guest then introduces herself as Sarah. Clutching the brooch, David shakes her hand.
Cast
- Martine Beswick as Queen Kari
- Michael Latimer as David Marchent
- Carol White as Gido
- Steven Berkoff as John
- Edina Ronay as Saria/Sarah
- Stephanie Randall as Amyak
- Alexandra Stevenson as Luri
- Yvonne Horner as first Amazon
- Sydney Bromley as Ullo
- Frank Hayden as Arja
- Robert Raglan as Colonel Hammond
- Mary Hignett as Mrs. Hammond
- Louis Mahoney as head boy
- Bari Jonson as the High Priest
- Danny Daniels as Jakara
Production
To save money, Hammer used nearly all the sets and the Carl Toms-designed costumes left over from One Million Years B.C. (1966).Kinsey, Wayne (2010) Hammer Films: The Unsung Heroes, Tomahawk Press, Sheffield, England, p. 66 [https://books.google.com/books?id=_zEEcAAACAAJ&q=hammer+films]
Shooting took place at Elstree Studios from 10 January to 22 February 1966 while One Million Years B.C. was still in post-production.{{cite book |last1=Senn |first1=Bryan |title="Twice the Thrills! Twice the Chills!": Horror and Science Fiction Double Features, 1955-1974 |date=2019 |publisher=McFarland |location=Jefferson, North Carolina |isbn=978-1476668949 |url=https://mcfarlandbooks.com/product/twice-the-thrills-twice-the-chills/ |access-date=12 November 2022}} The film was shot in DeLuxe Color and CinemaScope.
Reception
=Box office=
According to Fox records, the double feature of the film and The Devil Rides Out needed to earn $1,450,000 in rentals to break even and made $1,265,000, meaning they made a loss.{{cite book|page=[https://archive.org/details/foxthatgotawayt00silv/page/326 326]|title=The Fox that got away : the last days of the Zanuck dynasty at Twentieth Century-Fox|url=https://archive.org/details/foxthatgotawayt00silv|url-access=registration|last=Silverman|first=Stephen M|year=1988|publisher=L. Stuart|isbn=9780818404856 }}
=Critical response=
There's a bit of light bondage, a particularly silly spot of girl-on-girl wrestling, and lots of scenes in which people get wet for no particular reason. There's also, briefly, an appearance by that Hammer staple, the crazy old man who imparts dire warnings. This time the warnings are philosophical - keeping people as slaves leads to trouble - but in a film whose ending celebrates the end of the unnatural reign of black people over white people and brunettes over blondes, it's hard to see what lessons have been learned. Still, this is too camp a film to offend, too shallow to be accused of having any kind of political meaning.{{cite web |last1=Kermode |first1=Jennie |title=Prehistoric Women |url=https://www.eyeforfilm.co.uk/review/prehistoric-women-1967-film-review-by-jennie-kermode |website=Eye for Film |access-date=24 February 2025}}
Monthly Film Bulletin said "After an opening which suggests a blend of Rider Haggard and H. G. Wells, this ludicrous farrago soon establishes its own comic strip level with dialogue to match. As a spoof it might have been hilarious, but there is every indication that the makers are in deadly earnest – even when Martine Beswick, clad in an animal skin bikini edged with miniature rhinoceros horns and charging around with a whip, dances herself into a trance before an audience of slaves and fellow Amazons before throwing herself at the feet of her captive white hunter. One of the feeblest Hammer films to date, in fact, and not surprisingly kept on the shelf for a couple of years."{{Cite journal |date=1968 |title=Prehistoric Women |url=https://www.proquest.com/docview/1305825219 |journal=Monthly Film Bulletin |volume=35 |issue=408 |pages=121 |id={{ProQuest|1305825219}} |via=ProQuest}}
Tom Lisanti wrote in Film Fatales: Women in Espionage Films and Television 1962-1973: "[Beswick] was cast as Queen Kari in the film Prehistoric Women, a sort of follow up to the successful One Million Years BC [1966]. As the seductive and deadly leader of a tribe of lost amazons, Beswick had one of the great roles of a lifetime. Unfortunately, the production was plagued by indifferent direction, a low budget, and the fact that it was following up a gargantuan worldwide box office hit."Lisanti, Tom (2002) Film Fatales: Women in Espionage Films and Television 1962-1973, Jefferson, N.C: McFarland and Company, p. 61
Marcus Hearn wrote in The Hammer Vault: "An eccentric and unloved Hammer film that uses a blondes vs. brunettes scenario."{{Cite book |last=Hearn |first=Marcus |title=The Hammer Vault |publisher=Titan Books |year=2011 |isbn=978-0857681171 |pages=90}}
Leonard Maltin reviewed the film as: "Idiotic Hammer Film in which the Great White Hunter stumbles into a lost Amazon civilization where blondes have been enslaved by brunettes. Honest! Nevertheless it has developed a cult following due to Beswick’s commanding, sensual performance as the tribe’s leader."Maltin, Leonard (2009) 2010 Movie Guide. New York: Signet Books, p. 90.
Legacy
Hammer reportedly viewed the film as one of their worst productions, delaying the film's premier in Great Britain by nearly two years and re-titling the movie to Slave Girls.
Beswick claims that she "particularly enjoyed doing Prehistoric Women because even though it was such a B-film, the dialogue gave me some meaty diatribes against men, and, although I never considered myself a feminist, it was immensely satisfying to verbalize." Beswick also credited Carreras with encouraging her to be as wicked and cruel as possible, a role she said was greeted by mutual laughter between takes.
See also
- Prehistoric Women (1950 film) film of the same genre but different plot
- Blonde versus brunette rivalry{{cite news |last1=Page-Kirby |first1=Kristin |title=The battle of the blondes (and the brunettes) |url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/express/wp/2016/05/05/the-battle-of-the-blondes-and-the-brunettes/ |newspaper=The Washington Post |access-date=28 April 2023}}
References
{{reflist}}
External links
{{Wikiquote}}
- {{IMDb title|0062150}}
- {{rotten-tomatoes|1085338-prehistoric_women}}
- {{TCMDb title|4796}}
- [http://www.mondo-digital.com/hammerglamour.html Hammer Glamour website]
- [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G1OqQWyClak Prehistoric Women - full film on Youtube]
{{Hammer Horror}}
{{Michael Carreras}}
Category:1960s fantasy adventure films
Category:British fantasy adventure films
Category:Films shot at Associated British Studios
Category:Films directed by Michael Carreras
Category:Hammer Film Productions films
Category:Films set in prehistory
Category:British remakes of American films
Category:Films set in pre-colonial sub-Saharan Africa