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    Echofon Pro for Twitter

    Echofon Pro for Twitter

    Social Networking and Utilities

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    Echofon is the fastest, most powerful Twitter app for iPhone, iPod Touch and iPad and the ONLY free...

    Friendly Plus for Facebook

    Friendly Plus for Facebook

    Social Networking and Utilities

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    Friendly is a fast, simple and secure app to access you Facebook and Instagram accounts. With over...

    CloneFace

    CloneFace

    Entertainment and Photo & Video

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    CloneFace is a 3D face generator, that requires no special equipment, it just uses one photo to...

    Meme Maker

    Meme Maker

    Catalogs and Entertainment

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    Want to make your own memes? Make memes within seconds with this app! Simply pick the meme image...

    Daily Expenses

    Daily Expenses

    Finance and Business

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    Daily Expenses has received the following accolades & reviews: "What's Hot" section on the App...

    Helsana+ Bonus programme

    Helsana+ Bonus programme

    Health & Fitness and Sports

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    Collect Plus points with our Helsana+ bonus programme by exercising, taking preventive health...

One Million Years B.C. (1967)
One Million Years B.C. (1967)
1967 | Adventure, Fantasy
6
6.8 (18 Ratings)
Movie Rating
Not-bad Hammer dinosaur movie probably best-known for its special effects (by which I mean Ray Harryhausen's animation and Raquel Welch's costume). Bit-thick hero is kicked out of his own tribe, crosses a desert mostly populated by photo-blow-up monsters, meets another tribe who are so advanced they have discovered peroxide hair-dye and leg-waxing. Meanwhile Raquel Welch watches her dreams of being taken seriously as an actress go up in smoke.

Takes itself impressively seriously, all things considered; the decision to do the whole thing in made-up caveman language (sample dialogue: 'Tumak! Akita Loana!') makes it difficult to even have a coherent plot, let alone subtext, but I doubt that was the first concern. Harryhausen's dinosaurs are obviously rather wonderful; the decision to include photographically-enlarged lizards at certain points is questionable. It is what it is; the poster's claim that 'This is the way it was!' should probably not be taken too seriously.