By D.K. Holm
It should have come as no surprise that 10,000 B.C.
"won" its opening weekend at the box office. It came with a profitable
pedigree - that of a prime hit-making machine in the form of Roland
Emmerich, the German writer, producer and director behind previous
bombastic sub-Spielberg epics such as The Day After Tomorrow, The Patriot, Godzilla and Independence Day. Though
his films have shown diminishing returns with each successive release,
he retains the aura of a hit-maker, which is all that's needed in
Hollywood to get a project going, especially one that was probably
born, like so many recent flops, in the wake of Gladiator's surprise success way back in 2000. And in this case his instinct for what the audience wants proved once again true.
10,000 B.C. made $35.7 million its opening weekend, trouncing its nearest competitor, the Martin Lawrence comedy College Road Trip
($14 mil), and went on to make $139 million (and counting) throughout
the world. Though set at the birth of civilization (many viewers may
take the film as evidence of the end of civilization), the story
elements are as familiar as yesterday's sword and sorcery epics. It's
an action pastoral, in which D'Leh (Steven Strait) of the Yagahl tribe
sets off to rescue his true love, Evolet (Camilla Belle), who has been
kidnapped by a horse-borne group of slave traders. With his pal Tic-Tic
(the usually excellent Cliff Curtis), D'Leh encounters giant tigers and
mastodons before ending up in a weird religious society that blends
Mayan and ancient Egyptian elements.
10,000 B.C. was, of course, roundly condemned by the reviewers
and ended up with a nine percent approval rating on Rotten Tomatoes.
And it is very likely that the audiences that flocked to the film ended
up not even liking it either, if the film adheres to what is called the
Houxian Principal. The Houxian Principal was first enunciated by
internet critic Damon Houx, who once said (originally in reference to
the phenomenally and surprisingly profitable The Flintstones), "Just because a movie makes $300 million dollars doesn't mean that anyone liked it."
But let's say that the audience did like it. What was their "takeaway"?
The essence of its plot offers a man fighting to get back a (rather
striking) woman, and in the process bringing together (in an Obama
moment) black and white tribes in a heartwarming and optimistic
alliance. In the film's very last moments, D'Leh figures out that
harvesting and storing trumps hunting and gathering, and civilization
thus commences, in what is a loose visual allusion that is Emmerich's
version of the flying bone-weapon in 2001.
The "masses," as the commies used to call them, may not necessarily know what they are getting into with 10,000 B.C. but
the film is an uplifting paean to human unity; they were lured by the
trailer's visual quotations of monsters and arrows and violence and
attractive people. But if a positive, uplifting message is sneaked in,
as the Red screenwriters used to do, then maybe the $139 mil was well
spent.
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