As you stared across the shelves of Prime Time Video - or whatever the mom and pop in your town was called - as closing time grew near, you knew that you had to pick a movie. Cavegirl feels like one of those movies that was always there when you needed a rental.
Take it from someone who has seen enough cave and jungle girl movies to do nearly an entire week of them - this is no Caveman*with Ringo Starr. It is no 10,000 B.C. with Raquel Welch. Hell, it's not even George Eastman in Ironmaster.
Daniel Roebuck, who always gets parts on Rob Zombie and Don Coscarelli movies, is our hero, such as it is. His name is Rex and he goes back in time "25,000 ago to the Stone Age" even though the Paleolithic period really was 3.3 million years ago. But that's a minor quibble when this movie has a magic crystal that sends him back to the past. And when he gets there, all he wants to do is aardvark with Eba (Cynthia Thompson, Tomboy, Body Count), the Ayla of our story.
Seriously, that's it. Instead of worrying about screwing up the history of the world, Rex is trying to teach her how to say, "I want you to sit on my face." He may be evolved, but his definition of consent isn't. Also, at this stage of evolution, Rex and Eba bam-bamming in the ham is pretty much bestiality.
Stacey Q is in this movie. Yes, the girl who sang "Two of Hearts." She contributes a song to the soundtrack, "Synthicide," which is probably the best reason to watch this, unless you're a fan of direct to video actresses like Ms. Thompson. Actually, that's a good reason to watch this, I guess.
Director David Oliver Pfeil made the music video for Steely Dan's "Aja," the credits for Knight Rider and made the titles for movies like Star Trek VI, Innerspace and Footloose. This was his one and only full movie and he went all out, writing, producing, doing the cinematography and even the aerial camera work for it. He should have realized he was making a movie for Crown International Pictures, who demanded that he insert the locker room scene in the beginning to ensure that his passion project had enough bare breasts.
*That said, in Spain, this movie is known as Cavegirl: Cavernicola 2, making it seem as if it were a sequel to Caveman.
Take it from someone who has seen enough cave and jungle girl movies to do nearly an entire week of them - this is no Caveman*with Ringo Starr. It is no 10,000 B.C. with Raquel Welch. Hell, it's not even George Eastman in Ironmaster.
Daniel Roebuck, who always gets parts on Rob Zombie and Don Coscarelli movies, is our hero, such as it is. His name is Rex and he goes back in time "25,000 ago to the Stone Age" even though the Paleolithic period really was 3.3 million years ago. But that's a minor quibble when this movie has a magic crystal that sends him back to the past. And when he gets there, all he wants to do is aardvark with Eba (Cynthia Thompson, Tomboy, Body Count), the Ayla of our story.
Seriously, that's it. Instead of worrying about screwing up the history of the world, Rex is trying to teach her how to say, "I want you to sit on my face." He may be evolved, but his definition of consent isn't. Also, at this stage of evolution, Rex and Eba bam-bamming in the ham is pretty much bestiality.
Stacey Q is in this movie. Yes, the girl who sang "Two of Hearts." She contributes a song to the soundtrack, "Synthicide," which is probably the best reason to watch this, unless you're a fan of direct to video actresses like Ms. Thompson. Actually, that's a good reason to watch this, I guess.
Director David Oliver Pfeil made the music video for Steely Dan's "Aja," the credits for Knight Rider and made the titles for movies like Star Trek VI, Innerspace and Footloose. This was his one and only full movie and he went all out, writing, producing, doing the cinematography and even the aerial camera work for it. He should have realized he was making a movie for Crown International Pictures, who demanded that he insert the locker room scene in the beginning to ensure that his passion project had enough bare breasts.
*That said, in Spain, this movie is known as Cavegirl: Cavernicola 2, making it seem as if it were a sequel to Caveman.