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Moon Zero Two & When Dinosaurs Ruled the Earth [DVD] [2008] [Region 1] [US Import] [NTSC]

3.8 out of 5 stars 4 customer reviews

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Product details

  • Language: English
  • Aspect Ratio: 16:9 - 1.85:1
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Average Customer Review: 3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
  • ASIN: B001EZE5K6
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 234,095 in DVD & Blu-ray (See Top 100 in DVD & Blu-ray)

Customer Reviews

3.8 out of 5 stars
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Top Customer Reviews

For the two films, quality is very good, the widescreen perhaps a teensy bit tight but most acceptable, both would suffer if reduced to 4:3.

As to the films merits individually...well, man, the throwback that is Moon Zero Two, dude, is like, a jazz groove against the Man, or an anti-capitalist vibe. The music is occasional bursts of a sixties flavoured groove, three separate dance sequences that betray a lack of script filler but maintain eye interest for a while. The strong striking colours are so 1969, my mind went into Thunderbirds, The Prisoner and then vamoosed out my head when i fell into a trance. And no, the film is not entrancing. It is way too long at 100 minutes, as there is sufficient script and budget for perhaps half that. No doubt there is a cult that finds this slow, ponderous 'western in space', a masterpiece, but they should be few in number & wearing some kind of uniform. Not one of Hammer's more hammery films, this does however have fine acting, delightful females & staunchly solid astronaut-types. It just wears a bit thin a little too quickly.

The other flick- Where Dinosaurs Sauntered About and Appeared in the Nick of Time, however, is enjoyable & likeable, overall. There are some occasional laugh out loud times, when every one speaks the same words in cave-speak over and over again. But there is more than enough female interest here to keep eyes, brains etc involved. The uncut print herein strikes Victoria Vetri with the camera lens on a few occasions, prior to a cave grunt, post a swim-bathe in all her tanned glory. It is a pity she cannot really act a great deal. As such she would be acted off the screen by some interesting dinosaurs.
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I only got this for Moon Zero Two so I'll just review that one.

Acting can be a little corny and casting for the international moonbase is far too British in this 1969 Hammer Films "Space Western". Fashions are embarassingly bad in styles that can also be seen in Gerry Anderson's UFO and Space 1999. However, the lead character and his co-pilot are convincing, visual effects and sets are generally good and the plot is fairly gripping and credible. Definitely worth a look particularly if, unlike me, you're also interested in the Dinosaur film.
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Two lacklustre Hammer adventures set at either end of time: 'When Dinosaurs Ruled The Earth': a stop-motion, prehistoric opus which turns soft porn about two-thirds in; and 'Moon Zero Two': an incredibly naïve 'space western', kicked into touch by both the real-life moon landings and the release and consequent interstellar orbiting of Kubrick's '2001'.
I toyed with the idea of pitting 'MZT' positively against '2001' and coming up with a highly controversial comparison, but even in the perverse world I inhabit and absorb culture in - it would've been laughably unfeasible.

'MZT' is worth a view for several reasons - but combined, they're still not enough to make it a good film. It has a butt-kicking theme song from dreamy Julie Driscoll, part of a great overall score from Don Ellis (Though jazz..? space..? Why?). Catherine von Schell is quite fit; Adrienne Corri - a woman with a long cv in genre films - is comely in thigh-high police boots; Bernard
Bresslaw is a most unthreatening heavy and there's a great performance from Dudley Foster - the most shifty-faced character actor in cinema history.
The rest of it's fluff: plot's weak, leading man James Olsen....well, just isn't a leading man and the sets and special effects are daft.

Luvvie old Val Guest writes and directs 'WDRTE' but the title is misleading - there are nowhere near enough dinosaurs to rule a bit of shrub never mind the entire planet. There's a pretty good pterodactyl, but the rest are mundane. No vicious T-Rex or Allosaur, and shots of the jazzed-up caymans and komodo dragons from Irwin Allen's 'The Lost World' are cheaply squeezed in to bolster the action when it flags.
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I dare all of you big brutes out there to give into your primal urges and get in touch with your missing link!

When Dinosaurs Ruled the Earth was once banned because you get to see bare breasted cave hotties (including the most ample Victoria Vetri and rather pneumatic Imogen Hassall) on a general release film. Plus, the stop motion dinosaurs are awesome ... so much so that Jim Danforth was nominated for an Oscar. Everything else is rather ho hum (or just plain weird), but this film is already becoming a cult hit because it is the full, uncensored version that shows a lot more of cave women than is expected. ("But honey, it has an innocent rating, and I just wanted to see the action-packed adventure!" Nudge, nudge, wink, wink, say no more, except maybe UGH UGH HUBBA HUBBA ZUG ZUG!)

Moon Zero Two/When Dinosaurs Ruled the Earth [DVD] [2008] [Region 1] [US Import] [NTSC]
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews on Amazon.com (beta)

Amazon.com: HASH(0x9032afd8) out of 5 stars 4 reviews
9 of 9 people found the following review helpful
HASH(0x90352480) out of 5 stars Rare Hammer films worth a look 9 Sept. 2008
By A. Gammill - Published on Amazon.com
As a longtime fan of Hammer Films, I'm delighted that these two films from their later period are finally being made available. Although most folks seem to be focusing on DINOSAURS, I was actually more excited about MOON.

MOON ZERO TWO is real oddity. It was released a year after 2001 - A Space Odyssey, and is among the few films of the period to take a relatively serious approach to its subject matter. Having said that, there are several aspects of the film which hopelessly date it. For starters, the hideous psychadelic theme song sets the wrong tone. Imagine a lost episode of "Schoolhouse Rock," in which animated American and Russian astronauts compete to the beat of a psychadelic tune. From there, we are treated to other strictly-60's images, including women whose sole purpose is sex appeal (which is limited due to the horrible pastel wigs), astronauts in jumpsuits that make the pansy uniforms of SPACE: 1999 look like high fashion, and some very dull drama. On the plus side, the special effects are an agreeable cross between Douglas Trumball's groundbreaking work on 2001 and the less-impressive but still very-detailed work of the various Gerry Anderson series. In short, it's hardly a classic. But it's an interesting curio of its time, and a well-intentioned attempt at real science fiction.

WHEN DINOSAURS RULED THE EARTH is the follow-up to Hammer's highly-succesful One Million Years B.C.. Both are pre-history tales of fantastic creatures and women in skimpy bikinis. And while the absence of Ray Harryhausen (who provided the excellent dinos and such for the previous film) would seem a hindrance, his protege Jim Danforth does a credible job of bringing the various critters to stop-motion life. There is a plot, of sorts, as newcomer Victoria Vetri is blamed for the appearance of the moon in the sky. And she befriends one of the smaller dinos, and sheds her tiny fur duds for caveman Patrick Allen (yes, this is the uncut British version with brief nudity).

As with its companion Warners double-feature World Without End/Satellite in the Sky, there are no extras included. Still, the prints used look fantastic, and it's a small miracle to have either of these films on DVD in ANY condition.

While neither film is a real classic, Hammer fans will appreciate having them in their collections. And for folks who don't mind the less-demanding thrills of these types of movies, you could do a lot worse.
7 of 7 people found the following review helpful
HASH(0x910af174) out of 5 stars Fun flicks! 1 Jan. 2010
By nothingt5 - Published on Amazon.com
First of all, these were a Best Buy Exclusive called " Sci-Fi 70'S #1 (Dbfe) - DVD. SKU: 8879813 " and it's still available from them, so don't pay the Marketplace thieves who have no shame.

Dinosaurs movie is a fun film, the other one...not so much.
8 of 9 people found the following review helpful
HASH(0x91a5c528) out of 5 stars This boz set contains the uncut British version of Dinsosaurs 2 Sept. 2008
By Zuran - Published on Amazon.com
Potential buyers should be aware that this Hammer double-bill set contains the uncut version of When Dinsosaurs Ruled the Earth and not the G rated US theatrical release. Most importantly, it restores Veronica Vetri's brief nude scenes as well as nudity in an earlier scene in which a caveman rips the bra off his mate.
HASH(0x90c5d2f4) out of 5 stars Hammer Rules 5 Nov. 2010
By Talmadge K. Drury - Published on Amazon.com
Verified Purchase
Once again,what is Shlock Cinema to some,is Golden treasure to others whom,love Sci/Fi or fantasy adventure.These 2 Hammer Films,under the banner of Warner Brothers,are a must see for any fans.I agree with others about Moon Zero Two.'Billed as'The first moon western'while this is a Slow-moving Picture and in this day and age of C.G.I,it doesnt have a lot to offer in effects,The Director:Roy Ward Baker, gave it his best shot to capture a western feel to science fiction.When Dinosaurs Ruled The Earth,is a TREAT for any fan whom has watched the G-rated version over the years and can finally see Hammer Films Studios Un-cut version.Victoria Vetri,playmate of the year,1968 is ALL THAT!Val Guest,Veteran of Hammer classic films,Quatermass 2:enemy from space and others,Directs this classic with a sure hand,and the quality of video/visual and Audio on this double feature gives BLU-RAY a run for their Money!If you are a Collector of DVD's,and Hammer Films,Get this one while you still can!
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