By Steve D. Stones
The problem with most cave men movies is that they portray
women as curvaceous cuties with make-up and well groomed hair, and men with
barbershop haircuts and Harvard accents. Roger Corman’s 1958 film – Teenage
Caveman is difficult to take seriously because of this problem. Actor Robert
Vaughn even called it “the worst movie of all time,” and never includes it on
his resume of films he has starred in. The one thing going for Teenage Caveman
is that it uses the bizarre monster costume seen in Bernard Kowalski’s 1958
film – Night of The Blood Beast.
Vaughn plays a bored teenager (in case you didn’t know
already, even though he was well into his 20s when this film was made), who
breaks the law of his tribe and wanders beyond the river in search of “the God
whose touch kills.” In his first attempt, the tribe sentences him to death, but
does not follow through with the sentence. Vaughn tries a second time, and
confronts the monster known as “the God whose touch kills.” The monster is
killed and revealed to be a caveman from another tribe in a costume attempting
to scare off Vaughn’s tribe from traveling beyond the river.
When the monster is
unmasked, Vaughn discovers a book inside the costume with images from the 20th
century, such as a picture of an atomic explosion, the United Nations building
in New York, and two military men shaking hands. We then realize that Vaughn
and his tribe are not prehistoric men, but surviving members of a post-holocaust,
post-nuclear war society. Maybe that accounts for their clean cut haircuts and
fluent use of the English language?
Some accounts of this film have suggested that its original
title was – I Was A Teenage Caveman, to cash in on the success of the 1957 Michael
Landon film – I Was A Teenage Werewolf. However, no one has ever been able to
verify this claim. In his autobiography – How I Made A Hundred Movies In
Hollywood & Never Lost A Dime, director Roger Corman mentions that the
original title of Teenage Caveman was Prehistoric World, and was shot at
Bronson Canyon above Los Angeles in just ten days for $70,000. The sequences of
prehistoric monsters fighting each other is taken from an early 40s caveman
movie – One Million B.C. Happy viewing!!
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