Conventional where it should be bold and mild where it should be wild, "10,000 BC" reps a missed opportunity to present an imaginative vision of a prehistoric moment. With the nearly limitless ...
Warner Home Video's "10,000 BC" scored a triple victory for the week ending June 29. By Thomas K. Arnold, The Associated Press Warner Home Video’s “10,000 BC” scored a triple victory for the week ...
First-place finishes in at least 30 of 51 overseas markets played over the weekend propelled "10,000 BC," director Roland Emmerich's prehistoric epic, to the No. 1 spot internationally for the second ...
At the box office, “10,000” was only half as mammoth as “300.” Warner Bros.’ big-budget, prehistoric epic “10,000 BC” took in an estimated $35.7 million over the weekend, the studio said Sunday. For ...
LOS ANGELES (Hollywood Reporter) - The movie's title is "10,000 BC," but its characters and story line hark back to the first two decades of the last century, the era of D.W. Griffith. You have an ...
SUNDAY AM: All those cool CGI effects were nearly sunk by cruel reviews and even worse winter weather in midwest and southeast parts of the United States yet Warner Bros’ 10,000 BC easily finished the ...
10,000 BC could be back for another series on Channel 5. The broadcaster is planning to renew the caveman reality show for another run of episodes, according to Broadcast. 10,000 BC: Did the Stone Age ...
We're a bit disappointed. We'd come up with an amazing "is this the Stone Age or the Moan age" headline for 10,000 BC - the new Stone Age reality show which started on Channel 5 tonight - and then ...
UPDATE: First word coming to me is that today’s matinees were “good but not great” for 10,000 BC. My box office gurus are lowering their projections for weekend box office to low $30sM… THIS WEEKEND: ...
For a film that takes as many liberties with fact as "10,000 BC" the number 10,000 seems pretty arbitrary. Why not 20,000 BC? Or 100,000? Or even one million? For that matter, why can't this be ...
When a film is delivered to a theatre it comes not on one single reel but actually on several. It's then up to the projectionist to "build up" the film by splicing these sections of the film into one ...