
A time when mighty mammoths, saber-toothed cats, dire wolves, ground sloths, and cave bears ruled the earth for tens of thousands of years. Now be ready to watch Titans of the Ice Age like you never seen before, and Titans of the Ice Age will take you back through time 5,000 years before modern civilization, but also explore the harsh and beautiful landscape of the Pleistocene and learn about creatures that no longer live today and discover how our ancestors lived side-by-sid... (Full plot summary below)
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A time when mighty mammoths, saber-toothed cats, dire wolves, ground sloths, and cave bears ruled the earth for tens of thousands of years. Now be ready to watch Titans of the Ice Age like you never seen before, and Titans of the Ice Age will take you back through time 5,000 years before modern civilization, but also explore the harsh and beautiful landscape of the Pleistocene and learn about creatures that no longer live today and discover how our ancestors lived side-by-side with some of the most unique, feared and majestic animals to ever walk the planet!
Leave your thoughts about Titans of the Ice Age.
| Georgia StraightJanet SmithThe real draw of Titans of the Ice Age, and what sets it apart from so much epic-screen edutainment, is its deep, years-long level of research -- and its ability to convey it in a hugely accessible way. |
| User ReviewNico DAn amazing film that is awesome to watch front row, where the Mammoth is in your face, as are the Sabre Toothed Cats and Dire Wolves. A highly entertaining documentary film depicting North America just before 12,000 years ago (or 10,000 BC). The fight and hunting sequences were amazing. When the Sabre Tooth invades a Wolf pack's meal and kills one of them, my heart raced with the roar and yelp. This is a good film to take your kids to if they loved the 2002 classic "Ice Age". Come see it in your local IMAX theater while it's still hot. Excuse me, cold. |
| User ReviewGeorge NMy science class went to see "Titans of the Ice Age" because we are currently studying Evolution. When the film started, the narrator was talking about a mammoth calf that was found frozen in Siberia. This specimen came from a woolly mammoth, the best known of at least ten species of mammoth. The film suggests that mammoth's used their tusks not just for fighting but also to plow away snow to expose food. The film is not only about woolly mammoths. "Titans of the Ice Age" also extensively talks about Columbian Mammoths. The film incorrectly states that Columbian Mammoths lived in Canada, the Western United States and into Mexico. In fact, Columbian Mammoths lived as far south as Nicaragua and Honduras. There was a hot spring in South Dakota that has dried up. In the caves left behind, paleontologists are finding many colombian mammoth fossils as well as a few woolly mammoth skeletons. Amazingly, all of these mammoths were young males. Mammoths were not meant to survive into the modern times. The last population of mammoths died out circa 1650 bce. I thought that the film could have had a lot more information on ice age mammals that were not just mammoths. They did put in a ten-minute segment about predators of the ice age and mastodons, humans and ground sloths did get a nod at some point in the film but these little parts in the film raised a lot of questions. The film also could have used Latin Names to describe the animals. Also, the ending was not exactly an amazing end to an OK film. I give 2/5 |