The People That Time Forgot Page #3

Synopsis: A sequel to The Land That Time Forgot. Major Ben McBride organises a mission to the Antarctic wastes to search for his friend (Doug McClure) who has been missing in the region for several years. McBride's party find themselves in a world populated by primitive warriors and terrifying prehistoric creatures, all of whom they must evade in order to get back safely to their ship.
Director(s): Kevin Connor
Production: MGM
 
IMDB:
5.4
Rotten Tomatoes:
50%
PG
Year:
1977
90 min
79 Views


in the morning and 3:00 in the afternoon.

We could be back

before you're through here.

- What about the goddamn monsters?

- Trust me.

I looked after you in France, didn't I?

The way I remember it,

I was the one who saved your life.

That's what I mean, Hogan.

I owe you one, right?

Right.

Well, let's get started.

You still annoyed

at having to bring me along?

No, not really. It's just that certain

kinds of girls are hard to take.

Oh, you mean my kind?

Well, the world's a changing place, McBride.

You know what the real problem is?

You just can't stand competition.

Lady, I believe in a man

doing a man's work, that's all.

- What is it, doc?

- It can only be one thing... prehistoric.

Definitely prehistoric.

That's human.

Ben!

- You hurt?

- No. Thanks.

A genuine cavegirl.

She'll suit you perfectly.

She's all yours, doc. You're the expert.

In fossils, perhaps.

This is a little outside my field.

Don't touch!

She speaks English.

- That's crazy.

- No, it doesn't make sense.

Ben. See this knife she's carrying?

It's a Bowie knife.

I don't know how the hell she got it.

Well, yes, she must have been

in contact with Tyler.

- Tyler.

- Good God! She knows the name.

What is your name?

Ajor.

Ajor, listen, did Tyler teach you

to speak our language?

Yes. He teach you, too?

No. Tyler and me learned together.

Grow up together.

Tyler is a friend of mine.

I guess he's a friend of yours, too?

Was good man...

all gone.

Gone now.

Ajor has no friends.

- No people.

- Pull that photograph of Tyler.

Ajor...

Look.

Go on... take it.

Your friend Tyler seems

to have made quite an impression.

Why don't you...

go and light a fire or something?

Right, I've got the whole story.

She comes from a race of people

called the Galu.

It's a Stone Age tribe,

or at least it was when Tyler

and a girl called Lisa stumbled into

one of their settlements.

Lisa, wasn't that the girl

that Tyler rescued?

That's right. The only other survivor

of the original party.

Go on.

Well, it appears that Tyler and the girl

were welcomed by the Galu

- and lived with them for more than 2 years.

- I'm glad somebody's friendly.

During that time,

they taught the Galu farming skills,

generally helped them advance

from the Stone Age into the Iron Age.

Why is she so upset over Tyler's picture?

Because another more advanced race,

called the Naga,

didn't like the competition.

They massacred every Galu

they could lay their hands on.

Is... Tyler dead?

Well, there's a chance that Tyler

and Lisa may have been captured.

The Nagas usually sacrifice their prisoners

to appease their volcano god.

Well, in this case, it would make

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Patrick Tilley

Patrick Tilley (born 4 July 1928) is a British science fiction author best known for The Amtrak Wars series of books - a futureworld epic set on the eve of the third millennium in a world emerging from the ravages of a dimly understood global holocaust. The name "Amtrak" - appropriated by a specific group of survivors - is a name remembered from what is called "The Old Time". Contrary to what has been suggested, the author, his literary agents, and publishers have never been contacted by the current Amtrak organisation over an infringement of trademark. Interviews with the author via his own website were removed when the forum section was terminated at his own request. The Forum section of the website has since been made available again. more…

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Submitted on August 05, 2018

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