Missing Link | Peter Elliott, Michael Gambon | A Wonderful Film that doesn't fit in any category
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Missing Link
Missing Link
Peter Elliott
,
Michael Gambon
Universal Home Video, 1989
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based on 6 reviews
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highly recommended
This is a moody and moving film about the death of innocence
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was never meant to be an "action" movie; the cover apparently misled the previous reviewer. It is an excellent film, beautifully acted by the one lone character who appears in it. It is a posssible scenario for the extinction of early pre-hominids by emerging Homo sapiens and affords a moving portrayal of the death of innocence and the arrival on the world stage of the premeditated cruelty of which only our species is capable. I highly recommend it, but only if you are emphatically NOT looking for sometrhing of the "The Man-Beast that Ate Chicago" genre.
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A Wonderful Film that doesn't fit in any category
This is one of my favorite films. It grabs you and holds you down. It's very moving and makes you think. There is a little bit of the
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in all of us. I tried forever to find a copy of it---finally I got it by talking a video store owner into selling me his--the only one I could find anywhere. This should be required viewing in high schools. Maybe we'd all think a little more before we did things. Excellent, fantastic, but, sadly, I think, most people wouldn't "get it".
I'd really love for this to be released on DVD.
Extremely Unusual and Insightful
I just chanced to see this movie several years ago and was blown away by it. Some of the nature scenes were so strange that I really was not sure they were real at first. It presents some very interesting ideas about humanity and also about drugs. I almost never care to see a movie more than once but have probably watched this one a dozen times. The actor who plays the "
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" really had an opportunity to be creative and does a fantastic job of being nearly human.
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If you like physical anthropology, then you'll love this.
I first saw this movie when I was about 10 and I loved it. I've always been interested in evolution and early humans. "
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" takes place in Africa, 1 Million years ago. There is a tribe of Australopithecus robustus living together (referred to as "the man-apes" in this film). The film focuses on one male robustus. He returns to his tribe to find them slaughtered, including his mate and child. He himself is attacked and left for dead by more advanced black humans (possibly Homo Erectus, who lived in Africa at the same time.) Now the last of his kind, the man-ape must find a new place to live and keep away from any of the Homo Erectus (who are constantly on the look-out for him). He has a very hard life afterwards, looking for food and water and nearly dying from heat stroke and dehydration. The film blends with some awesome nature scenes. After all, Africa 1 million years ago is not that different from the Africa of today. Parts of the movie are funny and some are sad. Australopithecus robustus was ultimately a dead-end in human evolution. At certain points in time, there were more than one species of humans living together. Nature had to make several attempts at human evolution; if nature only made one attempt and if it failed then there would be no humans today. Human evolution continued through Homo Erectus (like the ones in the film). Modern humans are descended from them.
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Interesting Concept for a Film
I caught this film late at night on t.v. It is completely different than what the cover suggests. However, it is interesting to see how a "one character" film can be pulled off. It is an often sad film, but the lonely "
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" (as I refer to him) had some amusing moments. Watch for the scene in which he eats berries and they have a bombastic gastrointestinal result! Not a bad film, just different.
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