Author: Seth Shostak
Thursday, Oct 20, 2011

Who doesn't like historical epics? Costume dramas that give you an up-close-and-personal look at some musty but meaningful period when life was tough, but big things were happening?

Well, give director Roland Emmerich credit for attempting a new record in rewinding the clock. He's dared to take us back to the last ice age, to follow the story of a small band of our fur-fitted forebears as they mix it up with a non-stop parade of bad guys. Indeed, the world these heroes occupy seems so riddled with malevolence, you can understand the incentive somebody might have to flood the place, and wash away the general pestilence.

"10,000 BC" is one of those ever-popular, journey-to-manhood flicks. In this case an even-tempered stud named D'leh (Steven Strait) - the only guy in town with clean hair - tries to overcome a bad rap: his long-gone Dad is accused of cowardice. That's got to make it tough during recess, but D'leh shows the schoolyard bullies that he's got what it takes by single-handedly bagging a wooly mammoth. This shaggy Pliocene protein seems to be the principal menu item for D'leh's tribe - which is odd, given that they live above the snow line in a range of mountains that's more forbidding than the Old Testament. What are mammoth herds doing up there, anyway? Even goats would have a tough time finding enough to eat.

Nevermind. D'leh brings home the proboscidean bacon, and everything is looking good - or at least as good as things can look in a society where you probably die at a younger age than your pets - until some prophesied, four-legged demons, a euphemism for hooligans on horseback, ride into town, ransack the hovels (is there a reason to bother?), and then ride back out with our hero's blue-eyed girlfriend in tow. This ticks D'leh off, and shifts the movie into high gear.

What follows is an epic quest for revenge, and the retrieval of Ms Blue-Eyes - sort of like Virgil's Aeneid, but without the poetry. D'leh and his buddies pass from mountains to jungles to sandy deserts as easily as you go from Tomorrowland to Frontierland by turning a Disneyland corner. They pick up a few allies, confront a few nasty critters (saber-toothed tigers and - get this - carnivorous ostriches), and keep everyone facing the screen wondering what misery will engulf these guys next.

Anachronisms are thicker than a hippo's neck here, but it's all good (if improbable) fun that eventually brings our heroes to the nexus of evil - a large-scale construction project on the relentlessly sandy banks of some river. Well, not really "some" river, because what the local residents are building - a couple of giant pyramids, a row of smaller ones, a big ceremonial barque, and a sphinx - I mean, do I have to spell it out for you?

Archaeologists with both expertise and tenure tell us that the great pyramids of Giza were constructed around 2,500 BC. However, a few marginal authors and late-night radio pundits claim they go back about 12,000 years. The chances that this is true are about the same as the odds that a wormhole will open up in your bedroom tonight, and whisk you off to the Large Magellanic Cloud for breakfast with aliens. But in "10,000 BC," you'll be able to see this hypothesis writ large on the special effects canvas. This sequence alone is so oddly imposing, it's worth the price of admission.

Oh, and there's something else to be gleaned from watching this ice-age epic. For those who still wonder how ancient peoples could pile up a million squared-off rocks to make Giza's famous pointy architecture, Emmerich supplies the answer: domesticated wooly mammoths! That's right; these tusky terrors may be only sandwich fixings for D'leh, but whoever is building these pyramids has figured out how to use them to cut the overhead on public works projects. Defanged and tamed, they slog up and down steep ramps, hauling blocks of limestone behind. One assumes that the ramps would soon be adequately, if unappealingly, greased.

Well, OK. It's not really the history of the world, but "10,000 BC" has eye candy and action. And now, when someone asks "did extraterrestrials build the pyramids?" I can disabuse them of that nutty idea: "Don't be silly. They were built by a bunch of non-union, wooly mammoths." Works for me.

News

Related News

Featured Image
Jun 4, 2026
SETI Institute In the News: May Roundup 2026
#SETI Institute in the News #SETI Institute #Community #Solar System #Matija Ćuk #Neptune #SETI #Bill Diamond #UAPs #Drake Awards #Lori Marino #Matthew Tiscareno #Outreach #Exoplanets #Carl Sagan Center
Featured Image
Jun 1, 2026
SETI Institute Awards $1 Million in STRIDE Grants to Advance Astrobiology, Exoplanet Science, and Public Engagement
#Press Releases #STRIDE #Research #Carl Sagan Center #Spectroscopy #Solar System #SETI #Climate and Bioscience #Astronomy #Astrobiology #Exoplanets #Data Science #Education #Outreach #Hat Creek Radio Observatory #Unistellar #SkyMapper
Featured Image
May 5, 2026
Atlanta Science Festival Exploration Expo and the Arecibo Message
#Community #SETI Institute #Outreach #Education #Lauren Sgro
Featured Image
May 1, 2026
Asteroid Named in Honor of SETI Researcher and Communicator Seth Shostak
#Comets, Meteors, and Asteroids #Seth Shostak #SETI #Astronomy #Big Picture Science #Outreach #Andrew Fraknoi
Featured Image
Apr 15, 2026
2025 SETI Institute Activity Report
#Activity Reports #Carl Sagan Center #Outreach #Education #AIR #Community
Featured Image
Apr 3, 2026
SETI Institute In the News: March Roundup 2026
In March 2026, SETI Institute researchers contributed to a wide range of conversations about our solar system and the search for life beyond Earth. From explaining unusual features on Mars and studying meteor airbursts in Earth’s atmosphere to advancing new ways of detecting technosignatures, this work reflects how scientists are continually refining our understanding of both nearby and distant worlds. #SETI Institute in the News #SETI Institute #Community #Mars #Pascal Lee #Peter Jenniskens #Comets, Meteors, and Asteroids #Astronomy #Vishal Gajjar #SETI #AI and Machine Learning #Astrobiology #Nathalie Cabrol #Carl Sagan Center #Seth Shostak #Movie Reviews #Bill Diamond
Research

Related Projects

Featured Image
SkyMapper • SETI • Citizen Science • Astronomy
SkyMapper: Expanding Access to Real-time Astronomy Through a Global Astronomical Network
SkyMapper and the SETI Institute are connecting educators, students and the public to live astronomical observations through a distributed astronomical network. #SkyMapper #SETI #Citizen Science #Astronomy
Featured Image
VPL
Virtual Planetary Laboratory
How can we best assess whether an exoplanet supports life? #VPL
Featured Image
Discovery and Futures Lab
Discovery and Futures Lab
What happens if life beyond Earth is discovered? The Discovery and Futures Lab at the SETI Institute fosters novel and anticipatory research at the intersection of science, society, our planet, and the search for life beyond Earth.  #Discovery and Futures Lab
Support Us

Support the
SETI Institute

Scientists are getting closer in their search for life beyond earth. But with limited federal funding for the search for extraterrestrial intelligence, supporters are the reason cutting-edge scientists can keep their eyes on the sky.