What Parents Should Know
Parents need to know that this special effects-heavy
action-adventure features lots of violent scenes that pit
prehistoric tribesmen against large fierce animals and each
other (sometimes in massive armies). Action scenes include
hunts, chases, and fights; weapons include mallets, spears,
nets, and huge knives (sometimes used to bloody effect).
Several key characters are killed. There's also some minor
cleavage and some questionable stereotyping.
Families can discuss the film's accuracy. How much do we know about prehistoric life? How do you think the filmmakers decided on their version of the past? What parts do you think were sensationalized or fictionalized for impact? How could you find out more about the facts about this time in history if you wanted to? Families can also discuss whether they think the film plays on racial stereotypes. What parts of the movie might back up that theory? Does the movie rely on any other clichés? If so, what?
Common Sense Media Review
10,000 B.C. begins amid the Yagahl tribe, with narrator
Omar
Sharif detailing the requisite legend (concerning a "child
with blue eyes") and rough terrain. When a father leaves the
tribe, his young son is taunted as the "son of a coward." The
boy, D'Leh (who grows up to be played by
Steven
Strait), takes solace from his mentor, Tic'Tic (Cliff
Curtis), who trains him to hunt giant mammoths and encourages
him to keep faith in himself. A band of ferocious warlords
arrives on horseback, kidnapping the blue-eyed Evolet (Camilla
Belle), object of D'Leh's affection. He leads a small group
across snowy mountains, jungles, and a gigantic desert until
they find the villains driving slaves to build pyramids in
worship of a man they call "God" (Tim Barlow). D'Leh has to
muster his courage and lead a huge army -- his own few
followers plus legions of desert dwellers -- in order to defeat
the warlords and free the slaves.
With its average plot, nondescript heroes, and stereotypical villains, 10,000 B.C. is a movie between a rock and a hard place. Indebted to director Roland Emmerich's own Stargate (1994), it offers little in the way of new ideas. While it's tedious enough that D'Leh is The One fated to free his people, he also turns out to be the savior for a large number of others. The other tribes are especially impressed that, fulfilling a longtime prophesy, D'Leh is "The one who speaks to the spear-tooth." (Yes, he literally speaks to an unconvincingly digitized saber-toothed tiger.)
Magical connection with felines notwithstanding, it's disconcerting that when light-skinned, movie-star handsome D'Leh arrives at the sandy site of his "destiny," he's surrounded by dark-skinned warriors who've apparently been waiting to be led to freedom and glory. Surely it's only coincidence that the sign of D'Leh's achievement is a White Spear. As if to emphasize this old-fashioned race dynamic, the villains -- especially the man who lusts after Evolet and his testy sidekick -- have large noses, dark skin, and terrible attitudes. That they must suffer mightily at the hands of the hero is no surprise; at least they don't have to witness the movie's utterly preposterous ending.
Kids looking for a fun movie with a prehistoric setting would be better served with Ice Age and its sequel. Older viewers may also enjoy Quest for Fire, The Clan of the Cave Bear, and 1966's One Million Years B.C..
Common Sense Media is a nonprofit organization dedicated to providing information to help parents make media and entertainment choices for their families.



