During World War I, a German U-boat sinks a British passenger ship and takes the survivors aboard. After getting lost in fog, the submarine surfaces near the unknown island of Caprona, a lost world where they find dinosaurs and Neanderthals.
During World War I, a German U-boat sinks a British passenger ship and takes the survivors aboard. After getting lost in fog, the submarine surfaces near the unknown island of Caprona, a lost world where they find dinosaurs and Neanderthals.
The film's central narrative is an adventure and survival story in a fantastical setting, which inherently minimizes explicit political messaging. Themes of human cooperation and adaptation are presented pragmatically rather than ideologically, leading to a neutral rating.
The movie exhibits traditional casting with a predominantly white main cast, reflecting the typical representation of its time and genre. Its narrative focuses on adventure and survival, presenting traditional identities in a neutral to positive manner without incorporating explicit DEI themes or critiques.
The film "The Land That Time Forgot" is a science fiction adventure story focused on survival in a prehistoric world. It does not feature any identifiable LGBTQ+ characters or themes, thus there is no portrayal to evaluate within this framework.
The film features Lisa Clayton as the primary female character. Her role is not that of a combatant, and she does not engage in or win close-quarters physical fights against male opponents. Combat scenes primarily involve male characters against prehistoric creatures or other men.
The 1974 film adaptation of Edgar Rice Burroughs' novel retains the established genders of its main and supporting characters from the source material, with no instances of gender swapping.
The film adapts Edgar Rice Burroughs' novel. The main characters' races in the film align with their implied or explicit descriptions in the source material. No character established as one race in the source is portrayed as a different race in the film.
Combines user and critic ratings from four sources