Film critics gave the prehistoric adventure film “10,000
B.C.” some scathing reviews.
The San Francisco Chronicle called the movie “completely
ridiculous.”
The Washington Post said it was “just plain nuts.”
The New York Post said audiences would be “sorely
disappointed with this bloodless PG-13 adventure.”
The USA Today called it a “bombastic bore.”
Despite the hurling of insults by film critics, the public
ignored the gibes and flocked to theaters anyway. The cavemen confrontations
with woolly mammoths, saber toothed tigers and other prehistoric predators were
just too compelling.
The flick was #1 right out of the box, with a weekend take
just shy of $36 mill in North America and just
over $25 mill overseas.
In the most explicit terms, the Newark Star Ledger warned
anyone who was even thinking of seeing the film to “Yabba-dabba-don't.”
In a clear response, no doubt to the chagrin of film critics
across the nation, the public “Yabba-dabba did.”
|