Vietnam, 1968. El equipo de reconocimiento Vulture Squad se adentra en un valle aislado para investigar un pelotón de Boinas Verdes desaparecido. Su misión toma un giro oscuro cuando descubr... Leer todoVietnam, 1968. El equipo de reconocimiento Vulture Squad se adentra en un valle aislado para investigar un pelotón de Boinas Verdes desaparecido. Su misión toma un giro oscuro cuando descubren una amenaza invisible.Vietnam, 1968. El equipo de reconocimiento Vulture Squad se adentra en un valle aislado para investigar un pelotón de Boinas Verdes desaparecido. Su misión toma un giro oscuro cuando descubren una amenaza invisible.
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Opiniones destacadas
Let me preface this with my husband loves Jurassic Park so when I saw the preview for Primitive War I knew we were going to go. After being letdown by Jurassic Park Rebirth I was apprehensive about taking him to Primitive War, especially since we were driving an hour to the nearest theater that had it. All I can say is WOW I'm glad we did. This movie with, what I assume, is a much smaller budget than any of the big studios, impressed me so much I looked at my husband and said we are buying that one. The beginning of the movie sets the suspense right from the start and it just keeps coming. Is the acting 9/10 no. Is the CGI 9/10 not always. Does it all come together and is better than I expected? Absolutely. Go see it!
Think "Apocalypse Now" meets "Jurassic Park" for adults and you've got "Primitive War" set in 1968 Vietnam War.
The movie comes out swinging with a troop of Green Berets decimated by prehistoric Dinosaurs...being hunted whilst cool 60's Vietnam soundtrack rocks out of the speakers.
(In this scene Creedence's "Fortunate Son".)
The crack US "Vulture" squad led by their saving Sergeant, Ryan Kwanten, are dropped into this mysterious valley to extract any survivors under highly classified orders from the insane, f-bomb dropping Colonel Jericho (Jeremy Piven "Entourage"/"Rush Hour 2").
Honestly I was expecting low quality VFX, but "Primitive War" impressed this dinosaur fan.
There is plenty of dinosaur action packed into 2 hrs and 15 minutes on a minuscule budget of under 10 million USD and its first class.
They've created more faithful dinosaur designs than Spielberg and his cronies whilst paying homage to lots of Jurassic and War movie tropes.
Throw in a Russian Palaeontologist, Communist Soldiers, Worm Holes and a Nuclear Collider and you've got a party.
This Collider will make a hydrogen bomb look like a soldier lighting one of his farts!
The final battle scene in a South East Asian war zone (actually Gold Coast Hinterland) rivals the latest "Jurassic World: Dominion or Rebirth".
It's balls to the wall insanely good and makes up for some of the earlier lazy character exposition.
Towards the third act I was championing certain characters to survive this horror because I found myself actually engaged with a few of their stories.
They've done so much with so little despite an average script and average acting.
"Primitive War" really sticks it to Michael Crichtons big screen creation.
This is the fun, horror Dinosaur/War movie some of us have been waiting for, despite the crazy Rusky, Asian & American accents and not enough comedy to balance the drama.
Based on Ethan Pettus 2017 book this promises a sequel because there's more material waiting to be mined.
"Primitive War" ain't no walk in the park or run through the jungle, but it's Aussie director Luke Sparke's best film to date.
The movie comes out swinging with a troop of Green Berets decimated by prehistoric Dinosaurs...being hunted whilst cool 60's Vietnam soundtrack rocks out of the speakers.
(In this scene Creedence's "Fortunate Son".)
The crack US "Vulture" squad led by their saving Sergeant, Ryan Kwanten, are dropped into this mysterious valley to extract any survivors under highly classified orders from the insane, f-bomb dropping Colonel Jericho (Jeremy Piven "Entourage"/"Rush Hour 2").
Honestly I was expecting low quality VFX, but "Primitive War" impressed this dinosaur fan.
There is plenty of dinosaur action packed into 2 hrs and 15 minutes on a minuscule budget of under 10 million USD and its first class.
They've created more faithful dinosaur designs than Spielberg and his cronies whilst paying homage to lots of Jurassic and War movie tropes.
Throw in a Russian Palaeontologist, Communist Soldiers, Worm Holes and a Nuclear Collider and you've got a party.
This Collider will make a hydrogen bomb look like a soldier lighting one of his farts!
The final battle scene in a South East Asian war zone (actually Gold Coast Hinterland) rivals the latest "Jurassic World: Dominion or Rebirth".
It's balls to the wall insanely good and makes up for some of the earlier lazy character exposition.
Towards the third act I was championing certain characters to survive this horror because I found myself actually engaged with a few of their stories.
They've done so much with so little despite an average script and average acting.
"Primitive War" really sticks it to Michael Crichtons big screen creation.
This is the fun, horror Dinosaur/War movie some of us have been waiting for, despite the crazy Rusky, Asian & American accents and not enough comedy to balance the drama.
Based on Ethan Pettus 2017 book this promises a sequel because there's more material waiting to be mined.
"Primitive War" ain't no walk in the park or run through the jungle, but it's Aussie director Luke Sparke's best film to date.
If Apocalypse Now and Jurassic Park had a baby, you'd get Primitive War and that sentence alone is baffling enough to turn heads. A movie like this can go one of two ways: ridiculously stupid or surprisingly epic. To my surprise, it succeeds in most areas, despite a few rough edges.
The biggest strength lies in the direction. The cinematography and lighting are often stunning, creating an immersive atmosphere that fits the story perfectly. The camera work feels deliberate and engaging, pulling you into the chaos of the jungle. On top of that, the dinosaurs look fantastic. The inclusion of feathers was a great detail, and the CGI was convincing enough to make the creatures feel genuinely dangerous especially the raptors, who were easily the highlight.
The plot itself is simple, almost reminiscent of The Mist with its "experiments gone wrong" premise. I appreciated that the film didn't overcomplicate things and instead leaned into a straightforward survival story. However, the screenplay was definitely the weakest element. The dialogue often felt clunky and occasionally cringe worthy. The constant one-liners undercut the tension, and I wish the characters had approached their dire situation with a bit more seriousness.
As for pacing, the runtime felt justified and never dragged. That said, the ending went a little too far. I was already suspending disbelief for the story, but the final act with its slow-motion sequences and over-the-top carnage pushed things past the point of plausibility.
Overall, Primitive War is a ridiculously fun ride with strong direction, great cinematography, and some memorable dinosaur moments. It's not without flaws, the dialogue and ending drag it down but when the movie is firing on all cylinders, its no doubt epic.
The biggest strength lies in the direction. The cinematography and lighting are often stunning, creating an immersive atmosphere that fits the story perfectly. The camera work feels deliberate and engaging, pulling you into the chaos of the jungle. On top of that, the dinosaurs look fantastic. The inclusion of feathers was a great detail, and the CGI was convincing enough to make the creatures feel genuinely dangerous especially the raptors, who were easily the highlight.
The plot itself is simple, almost reminiscent of The Mist with its "experiments gone wrong" premise. I appreciated that the film didn't overcomplicate things and instead leaned into a straightforward survival story. However, the screenplay was definitely the weakest element. The dialogue often felt clunky and occasionally cringe worthy. The constant one-liners undercut the tension, and I wish the characters had approached their dire situation with a bit more seriousness.
As for pacing, the runtime felt justified and never dragged. That said, the ending went a little too far. I was already suspending disbelief for the story, but the final act with its slow-motion sequences and over-the-top carnage pushed things past the point of plausibility.
Overall, Primitive War is a ridiculously fun ride with strong direction, great cinematography, and some memorable dinosaur moments. It's not without flaws, the dialogue and ending drag it down but when the movie is firing on all cylinders, its no doubt epic.
You must go see this movie.
While there are some cheesy moments it still super enjoyable and for once dinosaurs have gotten the horror treatment they deserve.
Once you think that the movie cannot get any more crazy, it does, over and over again. The ending is the most "Hell Yeah" movie endings of all time.
While there are some cheesy moments it still super enjoyable and for once dinosaurs have gotten the horror treatment they deserve.
Once you think that the movie cannot get any more crazy, it does, over and over again. The ending is the most "Hell Yeah" movie endings of all time.
Entertaining time, but is about 30 minutes too long. Felt like the actors were doing character studies for their weekly acting class. They did a solid effort with the about the quarter of the budget that Jurassic park had. There were a lot of good scenes that could of made a great movie if they had better writing and acting and budget buy in. The third act had some great scenes as well and some good cinematography. Why does everyone feel the need to rehash old Vietnam tropes in their movies. This would hit the top of the leaderboard up on Netflix for a mindless, fun science fiction action movie. I just wonder what could have been if more people just believed in this movie.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaBased on the book series of the same name, written by Ethan Pettus and first released in 2017
- Bandas sonorasFortunate Son
Performed by John Fogerty
Written by John Fogerty
Published by Concord Music Publishing ANZ Pty Ltd
Courtesy of Concord Records
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Detalles
Taquilla
- Total a nivel mundial
- USD 181,660
- Tiempo de ejecución
- 2h 13min(133 min)
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