Reviews
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10,000 B.C. Review, by Michael Phillips of Chicago Tribune
Omar Sharif narrates, as if relaying a tale older and more revered than last year's cheese of choice, "300," by roughly 9,600 years. The time: 10,000 B.C., in a realm of momentous ecological change and enormous flightless prehistoric dinosaur bird...
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News
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Removed Links
SideReel and our moderators have removed links in response to complaints from copyright holders.
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Discussions
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14 minutes
Does anyone have any links that will continue to download past about 14 minutes into the movie? Every link I've tried was either invalid or only downloaded the first bit.
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I Delete the CRAP BS links!!!
And I add good links. If you state "High Quality" or "DVD Quality" and it is not, I will edit the title and say "cam" or "junk".
If you link ot a splash page or a page telling you to download Zango, I will delete it! Always. You link needs to be...
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suggestion
...Cant they just put it so only register user can edit links and find out who's deleting and ban... its a never ending battle ..
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Cast & Crew
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Camilla Belle as
Evolet -
Cliff Curtis as
Tic'Tic -
Joel Virgel as
Nakudu - Steven Strait as
D'Leh - Affif Ben Badra as
Warlord - Mo Zinal as
Ka'Ren - Nathanael Baring as
Baku
Wiki
More Information
It was a time when man and beast were untamed and the mighty mammoth roamed the earth. A time when ideas and beliefs were born that forever shaped mankind. 10,000 B.C. follows a young hunter (Steven Strait) on his quest to lead an army across a vast desert, battling saber tooth tigers and prehistoric predators as he unearths a lost civilization and attempts to rescue the woman he loves (Camilla Belle) from an evil warlord determined to possess her. |||| Director Roland Emmerich and composer Harald Kloser originally penned a script for 10,000 BC. When the project received the greenlight from Columbia Pictures, screenwriter John Orloff began work on a new draft of the original script. Columbia Pictures, under Sony Pictures Entertainment, dropped the project due to a busy release calendar, and Warner Bros. picked up the project in Sony's vacancy. The script went through a second revision with Matthew Sand and a final revision with Robert Rodat. Emmerich opened casting sessions in late October 2005. In February 2006, Camilla Belle and Steven Strait were announced to star in the film, with Strait as the mammoth hunter and Belle as his love. Emmerich felt that casting well known actors would distract from the realistic feel of the prehistoric setting. "If like, Jake Gyllenhaal turned up in a movie like this, everybody would be, 'What's that?'", he explained. Unknown casting also helped keep the film's budget down. Production began in spring 2006 in South Africa and Namibia. Location filming also took place in southern New Zealand[2] and Thailand. Before shooting began, the production had spent eighteen months on research and development for the computer generated imagery. Two companies recreated prehistoric animals. To cut time (it was taking sixteen hours to render a single frame) 50% of the CGI models' fur was removed, as "it turned out half the fur looked the same" to the director.



