CommentsXp
Best movie ever!
Orla Zuniga
It is interesting even when nothing much happens, which is for most of its 3-hour running time. Read full review
Yash Wade
Close shines in drama with strong language, adult themes.
Winifred
The movie is made so realistic it has a lot of that WoW feeling at the right moments and never tooo over the top. the suspense is done so well and the emotion is felt. Very well put together with the music and all.
mark.waltz
Magnified stock footage of lizards fighting, a tall man in a rubber suit (where you can almost see the zipper), and a cute marmoset which ends up as an h'orderve for a mammal eating plant give this entertaining but overall silly variation of "Land of the Lost" a memorable camp quotient. Unfortunately filmed in black and white (much of it overly foggy and difficult to make out what's going on in the background), this adventure is perhaps not as well known as other similar time travel movies or films set in lost continents because it isn't as technically superb as the many others in that genre. As a film historian and fan of this genre, I was surprised that I had never even heard of this, but found it fun overall in spite of obvious flaws. If there is a world out there on our huge planet, I hope it is never discovered or revealed to the public if it has been. What we don't need is a real life Jurassic Park, as the last films of that modern series have proven.The story surrounds an expedition to the south pole where commander Jock Mahoney takes a helicopter filled with scientists and reporter Shirley Patterson and finds more than he bargained for. As we witness the cracks and crevices of the sharp snowy mountain ranges, it becomes obvious that the world beyond our reach is one not meant for human visitors, and neither is the way below sea level lost world they find themselves stranded in where the dense fog keeps out the Antarctic snow and has that world stuck in one long gone from the rest of our planet. Unable to see what's going on around her, Patterson is unaware of the vegetation branches nearly pulling her in to a fate worse than death itself, but is spared (for now) that agonizing ending. Only when they find the cute little monkey to be do they get to see the power of ancient nature, and it's very disturbing to watch this cuddly little creature pulled into the abyss of a painful ending.When the lizards first appear, I began to wonder if this was stock footage used in other similar films, and when the T-Rex comes on, I had to chuckle by its lack of realism. A swimming dinosaur with huge teeth is scared off by the sound of a mysterious horn, and when Patterson is suddenly abducted, it is apparent that they are not alone. She ends up in the cave dwelling of the stranded Henry Brandon whose haircut does not resemble anyone who has been out of society for 10 years. Obviously, he wants a mate, and the only way he will help the others out is if she stays behind. Among the other crew is William Reynolds who calls for help but isn't about to stick around to try to rescue Patterson from Brandon if he can get out alive. This leads to fights between members of the expedition over rescuing Patterson, as well as trying to get Patterson away from Brandon or later on, going out of their way to try to get him to come back to civilization with them.Suspenseful but not scary, this is a popcorn movie that might satisfy for one viewing but in comparison with others falls short of becoming a classic. It's obvious that this was rushed out for the teenage boy matinee crowd and possibly for drive-in showings, but doesn't really hold up 60 years later due to weak special effects, phony looking sets and the rubber dinosaur suits that expose their seams and don't even direct the person inside the suit to walk with commanding fear like a T-Rex would. I would say in spite of his modern hairstyle, Brandon comes off the best in the acting department, and in the conclusion, the theme of surviving without leaving carnage behind does have an impact on how the crew members and their leader deal with the cave-man like Brandon. It's also interesting to see how the dinosaur deals with the sharp pains it gets as it is sliced open by the revolving blades of the helicopter.
lemon_magic
Seemingly in the same vein as material like "Journey to the Center Of the Earth" and various jungle safari movies (in fact, when I saw Jock Mahoney's name in the credits, I thought it was going to be a Tarzan movie). Pro: Good looking, photogenic cast, who work hard to sell the dialog and the premise. There were very few false notes as lines were delivered. Interesting plot dynamics, with the introduction (SPOILER ALERT) of an additional character halfway into the film; this fifth character's existence and demands complicate issues nicely. Pretty decent sets. And very few of the scenes, even the ones laden with exposition, drag. Not-so-Pro: Some poor special effects, especially the dinosaurs and the flying shots of the crews' helicopter superimposed against stock footage. A couple major plot holes that let the air out of the plot (I won't reveal too much, except to say that the fifth character reveals he has a way to control the dinosaurs, and it's highly portable - its existence takes all the leverage out his demands). Predictable arcs for all the characters (with an exception that the stock character I was sure was marked for death by his complaining and sniveling actually survives and redeems himself somewhat). Same old stock soundtrack - close your eyes and I defy you to distinguish it from "Revenge Of The Creature" or "The Mole People" - appropriate but not at all interesting. Still, worth watching for fans of 50s black and white genre films. I was pleased to see Jock Mahoney (who I remembered fondly from "Tarzan's Three Challenges") in another lead role, playing not just A Body, but a man with a fine mind, so I may be prejudiced a bit in the film's favor, but I give it 6 out of 10. No more than genre filler, but well done genre filler.
AaronCapenBanner
Virgil Vogel directed this science fiction yarn about a Naval expedition in the Antarctic(led by Jock Mahoney, William Reynolds, and Phil Harvey) along with a female reporter(played by Shirley Patterson) who land in a crater well below sea level that contains a prehistoric world containing dinosaurs(both on land and in the sea) as well as carnivorous plants and a deranged sole survivor(Dr. Hunter) of a previous expedition. Can they repair their helicopter in time to rendezvous with their ship, before they are stranded in this lethal land? Marginal film has good story but clichéd treatment and characters. Some model F/X are poor(the T-Rex) while others aren't bad at all(the sea dinosaur). Watchable as a rainy-day diversion, but little more, though is an understandable cult item.
BaronBl00d
The Land Unknown is your typical 50's sci-fi film that was made with a slightly bigger budget than most. Four Antartic "explorers" flying back from a re-con mission hit a storm and have low fuel and are hit by a pterodactyl and must land in what they find to be a tropical prehistoric land in the shadow of a volcano. Here - thousands and thousands - of years before mankind has evolved are man-eating squid-like plants, a water dinosaur with large flippers, a cute monkey we are told is a prehistoric link to mankind, and, let's not forget the best of them all, a T-Rex that is patently poor design as it walks and looks like a man in a real bad costume. Days go by in this oven in the middle of the Antartic as some of our characters begin to go - yes, you are right - CRAZY. But what if another form of human life had also been swallowed by this valley years before - wouldn't that make for some real exciting stuff? OK, yeah - if you say so. The Land Unknown isn't a bad sci-fi film really; it just isn't a real good one either. The actors are all competent though I really didn't find any of the terribly likable. The whole business with lovely Shirley Patterson aka Shawn Smith tagging along with all these enlisted men was not very convincing. Yet, despite the definite lack of script power, all of the actors are engrossing enough. The set designs in this fantastical world are very well-conceived too. The biggest problems start with the script but quickly move to just how bad some of the dinosaurs(and that ridiculous plant too) look. Barney is scarier than that grinning T-Rex. Nonetheless, this is one of those fun science fiction films to sit down too, relax, and enjoy at some degree.