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Teenage Caveman (1958 film)

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Written by
  
R. Wright Campbell

Cinematography
  
Floyd Crosby

Initial release
  
1958

Budget
  
70,000 USD

Music director
  
Albert Glasser

3/10
IMDb

Produced by
  
Roger Corman

Music by
  
Albert Glasser

Edited by
  
Irene Morra

Director
  
Roger Corman

Screenplay
  
Robert Wright Campbell

Teenage Caveman (1958 film) wwwgstaticcomtvthumbmovieposters39846p39846

Starring
  
Robert Vaughn Darah Marshall

Cast
  
Robert Vaughn, Frank de Kova, Jonathan Haze, Leslie Bradley, Ed Nelson

Similar
  
Caveman movies, Directed by Roger Corman, Science fiction movies

Teenage Caveman (a.k.a. Out of the Darkness in the UK) is an independently made 1958 black-and-white science fiction adventure film, produced and directed by Roger Corman, that stars Robert Vaughn and Darah Marshall. Teenage Caveman was released theatrically on a double bill with How to Make a Monster.

Contents

The film was originally shot as Land of Prehistoric Women, but the title was changed by its distributor, American International Pictures.

Teenage Caveman (1958 film) Teenage Caveman 1958 film Wikipedia

Years later, Corman stated in an interview, "I never directed a film called Teenage Caveman". Lead actor Vaughn stated in an interview that he considered Teenage Caveman to be the worst film ever made. It was later featured on the mocking television series Mystery Science Theater 3000.

Teenage Caveman (1958 film) CONELRAD Atomic Films The CONELRAD 100 TEENAGE CAVEMAN

Teenage caveman 1958


Plot

Teenage Caveman (1958 film) Teenage Caveman 1958 Posters Details Four Color Comics

A tribe of primitive humans lives in a barren, rocky wasteland and struggle for survival, despite a lush, plant-filled land on the other side of a nearby river. They refuse to cross the river because of a law that evolved from an ancient tale warning of a god lurking there who brings death with a single touch.

Teenage Caveman (1958 film) Teenage Caveman 1958 Posters Details Four Color Comics

A young man of the tribe challenges the law and is eventually followed by other male members of his tribe, who fearfully cross the river in order to bring him back. They soon encounter the terrible god, a large, horribly burned but strangely human-like creature. Despite the young man's peace overture to the god, another tribal member, out of fear, lays a trap and stones the creature to death with a large rock; the young man then shoots and kills that tribesman with one of his arrows. The others gather around the now dead god and discover that the creature is actually a much older man with long white hair. He is wearing some kind of strange, unknown outer garment with a fearful hood. They find another strange thing in the old man's possession; they are puzzled by this flat, thick object that opens and contains mysterious markings and vivid black, white, and gray images that show an even stranger human world unknown to them.

Teenage Caveman (1958 film) Roger Corman directed a young Robert Vaughn in the 1958 B movie

In a surprising denouement provided by the ancient man after his death, the truth is revealed in voice-over as the tribesman page through his book: He was actually a survivor of a long-ago nuclear holocaust, forced to live for decades inside his now ragged, discolored, and bulky radiation suit (which is implied to have once been covered with deadly radioactive fallout). The ancient man has wandered the land for decades while the primitive remnants of a devastated human race have slowly increased their numbers; his frightening outer appearance caused them to fear and shun him.

A final, cautionary question is asked in voice-over by the old man: Will humanity someday repeat its nuclear folly after civilization has once again risen to its former heights?

Production

Teenage Caveman was budgeted at $70,000.

Release

Teenage Caveman was released in July 1958. The film was released on DVD by Lionsgate Home Entertainment on April 18, 2006, as part of a two-disc set, with Viking Women and the Sea Serpent as the first disc.

References

Teenage Caveman (1958 film) Wikipedia