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Allan Quatermain And The
Temple Of Skulls
(2008)
Director: Mark Atkins
Cast: Sean Cameron Michael, Christopher Adamson, Natalie Stone
I don't think that I have mentioned it
before, but now is probably the best time for
it: I am a huge fan of the movie Raiders
Of The Lost Ark, and have been since I
first saw it. I remember very well the first
time I saw it, way back when I was ten or so
years old. My parents took me and my siblings to
the movie theater to see it, and I had
practically no knowledge about what I was about
to see. All that I had known about the movie
beforehand was from sneaking a look at the last
page of the (badly drawn, I must say) Marvel
comic book adaptation of the movie, though what
I saw gave me no idea about what the movie was
about or what was going to happen. Getting back
to the movie and my first time watching it, I
remember being blow away. I had never seen
action like that before. Not only was the movie
filled with more action scenes than I had seen
in other movies before, but each action sequence
was amazing and could stand alone against the
others. I also remember being freaked out like
never before by the climax of the movie,
specifically at the point when Ronald Lacey's
face melted in extreme close up. I had never
seen gore like that before in a movie. When I
went to see the movie again in a re-release a
few months later, I knew when to shut my eyes.
Fortunately, subsequent years of seeing tons of
various violent acts onscreen has hardened me,
so I can laugh long and hard at that scene, no
doubt as Steven Spielberg intended.
I remember how my love of Raiders Of
The Lost Ark has lasted all of these
years, and how it has influenced me. When the
Academy Awards ceremony came out several months
after the movie had been released - and the
movie was one of the five nominees for the Best
Picture award - I was watching right there and
rooting for the movie. I remember being severely
p*ssed off when Raiders lost to
Chariots Of Fire - how could a silly
movie about running beat a movie with all those
great action sequences? I still think
that way (though I will admit the producers of
Chariots had great taste with
casting Dennis Christopher in a supporting
role.) In the subsequent years that passed from
that point, my love for Raiders
has stayed strong. I remember being so starved
for Raiders-like entertainment (and unable to be
patient for the completion of the next
installment, Indiana Jones And The Temple
Of Doom) that when I saw the Raiders
knock-off Treasure Of The Four Crowns
on cable TV, I thought at the time it was
fantastic entertainment that could stand up to
its inspiration. I smartened up in subsequent
years, and now recognize it as the Golan and
Globus cheese that it really is. There have been
other movies I have turned to in the years
between installments of the Raiders
series: The Further Adventures Of
Tennessee Buck... The Perils Of
Gwendoline In The Land Of The Yik Yak...
The Ark Of The Sun God... none of
them have come close to its inspiration, or even
to any of the of Raiders prequels
or sequels.
Besides watching many of the movie knockoffs
of Raiders to quench my thirst for
more of the real thing, there have been other
ways I have tried to recapture that feeling of
watching the movie. When I was younger, one of
those ways was by reading the H. Rider Haggard
classic novel King Solomon's Mines - I
had heard that it was one of the inspirations
for Raiders. I remember that I
loved the novel. It wasn't an action-packed
novel, but Haggard had a
way of writing events
so that even the most mundane things came across
as compelling. I remember being pulled by the
explorers' long journey though the desert and
mountains to their destination, while there I
was enthralled by the big battle sequence (and
getting a kick out of a bloody decapitation at
its end.) So when I was at the video store the
other day, and saw that the hero of King
Solomon's Mines had been put in a new movie
- Allan Quatermain And The Temple Of
Skulls - you would probably have thought
I'd be enthusiastic. Well, I would have been, if
the movie hadn't been made by the good folks at
The Asylum. A quick explanation for those not in
the know: For the past few years, The Asylum has
made a (bad) name for itself by making extremely cheap,
cheesy, and critically trashed movies made to
cash in on major Hollywood movies. Their past
efforts include Transmorphers,
100 Million BC, Snakes On A
Train, and The Da Vinci Treasure.
This particular Asylum effort is obviously made
to cash in on Indiana Jones And The
Kingdom Of The Crystal Skull. But I ultimately decided to take a chance and watch
this latest effort. Even if it turned out to be
bad, it would give me a chance to inform readers
to be wary of movies from The Asylum with this
example.
It's understandable that viewers who have no
advance knowledge of The Asylum and their movies
might think that they'll be getting
spell-binding action and adventure in the vein
of Raiders Of The Lost Ark with
this movie. The cover of the DVD box practically
screams that is what viewers will get. The box
art includes three old-fashioned airplanes
flying in the air, a gigantic group of Zulu
warriors charging forth, piles of gold coins, a
lion, and a structure that I guess we are
supposed to assume to be the temple that is
mentioned in the title (though to me the
pictured structure looks more like the kind of
steeple that's to be found on an old Mexican
church.) Most prominent on the box is a picture
of the movie's protagonist, who is wearing a
leather jacket and brandishing a bullwhip in one
hand, no doubt to make us think of Indiana
Jones. Even if viewers didn't see the box art,
they might think they're getting Raiders
action by the plot description. The setting is
South Africa some decades ago. Adventurer Allan
Quatermain (Michael), in need of tuition money
for his son back in England, is prepared to sell
a portion of a treasure map to the evil treasure
hunter Anisley Hartford (Adamson, Pirates
Of The Carribean). But ultimately he
decides to sell the map to newly-arrived Sir
Henry Curtis (Daniel Bonjour) and Lady Anna
(Stone) , the latter of which is looking for her
brother who disappeared looking for the
treasure. It promises to be a long and tough
journey through the wilderness, and there is the
threat of Hartford, who is determined to get the
treasure for himself.
As I said, some viewers may be thinking they
are getting something good with a rental of this
movie, but viewers familiar with direct-to-video
movies - especially those from The Asylum -
probably won't. They'll be saying, "There's
no way they will be able to pull this off,
especially with such a low budget!" And they'd
be right. Allan Quatermain And The Temple
Of Skulls is pretty terrible. But I
would be lying if I said it was 100% bad; there
are actually a few good things I can mention
about it, starting with the locations. You are
probably thinking, like I did before watching
it, that they would probably try to pass
southern California or some other place for
South Africa. But they didn't; they actually
went all the way to South Africa to film this.
And the locations they picked to shoot in South
Africa aren't the typical dry and desert
locations other movies (like
Survivor) have
picked when they have shot in the country. Here
we get lush green fields of grass, rivers, and
mountains. A few shots of these locations are
breathtaking. And at the cave sequences at the
end of the movie, they didn't shoot in the small
and cramped caves of southern California, but in
a gigantic South African cave that looks pretty
spectacular. Besides the good-looking locations,
some of the computer-generated special effects
are good to look at as well. There is an attack
by a swarm of insects (just what insects they
are is never revealed) that looks better than
you'd expect. And towards the end of the movie,
we get a shot of gigantic sculptures carved out
of the side of a mountain that looks pretty
realistic.
If pressed to admit anything else of merit in
the movie, I might mention the fact that they
got an actual old steam train for a few minutes,
though I must mention that the effect is
somewhat spoiled by the fact the train is
pulling only two train cars. And if I
recall correctly, the protagonists are the only
passengers shown to be on this train. Those
facts are not the only ways that the movie is
lacking. Remember all that stuff I described was
on the DVD box? Well, there's little of that in
the movie. There are not three airplanes, not
even two or one. There are only a few Zulu
warriors. There are no gold coins. No lions.
There's no bullwhip, and the movie's "temple"
(if you can call it that) looks nothing
like what was pictured on the DVD box. All this
missing stuff may have been forgiven if the
movie gave us some other (and spectacular) stuff
to view, but the movie fails to do so. This is a
really cheap movie. How cheap is it?
Well, when the protagonists start on their
multi-day journey (on foot), they travel those
several days without bringing with them any
supplies! And they walk... and walk... and
walk... without hardly anything that could be
considered "action" ever happening. This movie
is not only really cheap, it's also really
slow-moving and boring. It takes forever for the
quest to get started, and once it does it's
needlessly padded out. Not surprisingly, the
actors seem defeated by the conditions they are
working in. As the hero, Michael is soft-spoken
and seems sad - hardly heroic qualities. Just
how cheap, slow, boring, and poorly acted is
this movie? It makes Treasure Of The Four
Crowns look like Raiders Of The
Lost Ark. It's only fit for inmates of
The Asylum, who are deranged enough to think
anything is good.
Check for availability on Amazon (DVD)
See also: Bridge Of
Dragons, Drive,
Survival Quest
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