

Primordia theme tv#
If you are a fan of 70 and 80’s made for TV sci-fi action this will be in your sweet spot. It helped to play the audiobook at 1.25x speed to get more normal speech flow. In addition the narrator drags out things with a slow, ponderous delivery. I was somewhat surprised as they moved on each time, as if they did not retain trauma from what had happened.

So as they run into trouble, I was only mildly interested in their plight. The characters are fairly predictable and are lightly drawn.

The premise of the book is what if Sir Arthur Conan Doyle’s Lost World was based on fact and not fiction? A descendant of a long-dead explorer, who purportedly was the source for the original story, discovers clues to the real truth, and along with several of his friends sets off to find out. This book passed the time and offered a blend of action and Sci-Fi, however, the characters and plot were a little shallow and I had trouble getting really hooked.
Primordia theme movie#
Reminiscent of made for TV Sci-Fi action movie In the remotest corners of the Venezuela, along winding river trails known only to lost tribes, and through near impenetrable jungle, Ben and his novice team find a forbidden place more terrifying and dangerous than anything they could ever have imagined. For Ben and his friends, it becomes a race against time and against ruthless rivals. But other parties now know about the notebook and will do anything to obtain it. As Ben digs some more, he finds clues to the whereabouts of a lost notebook that might contain a map to a place that is home to creatures that would rewrite everything known about history, biology and evolution. A journey into the deepest, darkest jungles of the Venezuelan Amazon.and a primeval place and time that mankind was never meant to exist in.īen Cartwright, former soldier, home to mourn the loss of his father, stumbles upon cryptic letters from the past between author Arthur Conan Doyle and his great-great-grandfather who vanished while exploring the Amazon jungle in 1908.Īmazingly, these letters lead Ben to believe that his ancestor’s expedition was the basis for Doyle’s fantastical tale of a lost world inhabited by long-extinct creatures.
