Prehistoric Peeps (film)

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Prehistoric Peeps was a 1905 British one-reeler film, directed by Lewin Fitzhamon and produced by the Hepworth Manufacturing Company. The only existing print has been preserved by the British Film Institute.[1]

The film was one of the "cavemen comedies", an early film genre which was inspired by the cartoon series Prehistoric Peeps by Edward Tennyson Reed.[1] The film reputedly depicted the first onscreen dinosaurs in film history, portrayed by actors inside pantomime models. The film is unavailable to the modern public, and the claim can not be verified.[1]

Plot[edit]

The film depicts the dream of a sleeping scientist. He dreams of being lowered into a cave, surrounded by its stalactites. A prehistoric monster comes to life, and chases him within the cave. The scientist uses his revolver to shoot the monster, but the bullets seem to have no effect on it.[1]

The scientist emerges on the ground above the cave, and the monster continues to chase him. The monster eventually succumbs to its bullet wounds. The scientist is then surrounded by prehistoric women, who live in grass huts. More monsters appear and chase the scientist and the women away.[1]

In the waking world, the scientist's wife discovers him asleep in his own laboratory. He is surrounded by his fossil collection. The wife uses a soda siphon to wake up the scientist.[1]

Analysis[edit]

In the 1880s, parodies and cartoons of cavemen became popular. In 1893, cartoonist Edward Tennyson Reed launched the cartoon series Prehistoric Peeps in the British humor magazine Punch.[2] One of Reed's best known drawings depicted a caveman tribe playing cricket at Stonehenge, using the monument's stone arches as wickets. The drawing inspired a humorous hoax. The hoaxer carved a mammoth bone into a cricket bat. Then the bat was planted at Piltdown, Sussex, alongside a forged fossil skull. It was implied to be the earliest Englishman, buried with the earliest cricket bat. This joke became known as the Piltdown Man.[2]

The 1905 film was based on Reed's work. It took the form of a live-action silent film comedy. It became the first dinosaur film, and depicted cavemen living alongside dinosaurs. This depiction formed part of an artistic tradition, later represented by the comic strip Alley Oop (1932-) and the television series The Flintstones (1960–1966). This artistic tradition may have influenced the Creationist fantasies of actual prehistoric people living alongside dinosaurs.[2]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d e f Merkl (2015), p. 278
  2. ^ a b c Sarmiento, Mowbray, Sawyear (2007), p. 247

External References[edit]

  • Ulrich Merkl (November 25, 2015). "Notes". Dinomania: The Lost Art of Winsor McCay, The Secret Origins of King Kong, and the Urge to Destroy New York. Fantagraphics Books. ISBN 978-1-60699-840-3.
  • Sarmiento, Esteban E.; Mowbray, Kenneth; Sawyer, Gary J. (June 28, 2007). "Appendix 2". The Last Human: A Guide to Twenty-two Species of Extinct Humans. Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0300100471.

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