Yor, the Hunter from the Future

Scott Clevenger
11 min readNov 6, 2022

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When loincloths and dinosaurs meet robots and Hammer pants.

Yor, the Hunter from the Future (1983)
Directed by: Anthony M. Dawson
Written by: Anthony M. Dawson and Robert D. Bailey, based on the graphic novel “Henga, el cazador” by Ray Collins & Juan Zanotto

Tagline: He was a powerful warrior from the future, trapped in a prehistoric land, battling for the survival of his people.

Let me get something off my chest right away. YOR HUNTER FROM THE FUTURE has one of those shouty titles that seems to be trying a bit too hard to make me feel proprietary about the hero, the way sports franchises and local TV commercials do. You knowm “Your USC Trojans!” or “at Your Lincoln-Mercury Dealer” or “in Your Grocer’s Freezer.” What I’m trying to say is, he’s not my hunter from the future. Personally, I think he’s probably going to do some very stupid things, and I want it completely understood that I’m not responsible for him.

Director Dawson — actually a pseudonym for Italian filmmaker Antonio (Cannibal Apocalypse) Margheriti — gets right down to business by opening up on a shot of the world’s largest sandstone penis. While we’re still choking on that image, he abruptly slaps us in the face with the movie’s theme song (“Yor’s World”) which sounds like Kajagoogoo singing “Nature Boy” while being flogged with an patch cord by Giorgio Moroder.

Yor enters, dressed like the old Jack Kirby comic book character “Kamandi, the Last Boy on Earth” — loincloth, crude axe, UGG boots, and the blond hairstyle favored by the mascot for Dutch Boy Paints — and played by “Reb” Brown (at least, that’s what the Orthodox Jews call him).

Yor does a couple laps around the fossilized dildo, then exits, pursued by the credits.

A tribe of fur-wearing Neanderthals are lighting the Olympic torch, which seems like a risky pastime for folks who are each sporting about eight pounds of crepe hair. The Elder, who looks like a wizened and slightly confused Ted Neely, says, “Now be about your business. Let this day be celebrated with feasting and hunting,” and while I wouldn’t presume to tell a barbarian his business, it seems like you might want to do the second thing first, or the feast is going to suck, and you’re going to have to hunt with a low blood sugar headache.

Out in the forest, we meet Ka-Laa, whose name sounds like a vocal warm-up exercise, and who’s played by Corinne Cléry, star of The Story of O, Moonraker, and the 1976 Ernest Borgnine sex romp Holiday Hookers. Ka-Laa is already being about her business, getting mentored in bush-lore by Paleo-Jack Elam, who’s wearing an off-the-shoulder bear skin that cunningly accentuates his armpit hair and man-boobs. They catch a tiny plush toy stegosaurus, but just then its mother shows up and gores Paleo-Jack, forcing Ka-Laa to attempt a facial expression.

Nearby, Yor pauses to cock an ear. As an experienced hunter from the future, he recognizes the enraged bellow of a charging Sid ’N’ Marty Krofft puppet, and he rushes to join the battle. The mother dinosaur is sort of a mash-up between Gamera and a Chinese New Years dragon, and it quickly becomes clear the thing is made from paper mache when our hero hits it with his axe and the head breaks open like a piñata. A geyser of blood spews into the air while Yor the Hunter gazes at his kill, wondering where all the Bite-Sized Snickers went.

Like Patrick Swayze in Red Dawn, Yor drinks the blood of his prey, and forces Ka-Laa to guzzle a handful too, because pick-up rituals haven’t yet evolved to the point where he can just buy her an Amstel Light. Paleo-Jack gets up and introduces himself, apparently none the worse for the goring.

The tribespeople are transfixed by Yor’s big gold medallion, claiming they’ve never seen anything like it before, although the idea that a bunch of Italians in the early 80s have never seen a beefy guy wearing a medallion is probably the funniest thing in this movie. But it turns out the Elder knows a goddess on the other side of the mountain with similarly gaudy taste in jewelry, and offers to set up a play date.

The Tribe treats Yor to a feast that is rich in barbaric splendor, by which I mean they hand him an underdone brisket while a couple of middle-aged women put on smocks made of cargo netting and spin around like dreidels. Yor waves his meat in the air and yells “Woo!” suggesting he prepared for the role by studying the lap-dance patrons at Bob’s Classy Lady on Sepulveda Boulevard.

Meanwhile, the music attracts some cave men, who were in the midst of following a Ron Perelman makeover in Sabertooth Tiger Beat! If anything, these guys are even hairier — dripping with furs and sporting wigs taller than the B-52s. They attack the village with clubs, but the Tribe has mastered stone axe technology; plus they have Yor on their side, and he’s super cut and really knows how to karate-chop a troglodyte. Our hero fiercely defends his new companions, until it starts to get hard, then he runs away.

On the way out of town Yor grabs Ka-Laa and takes her to the cave where he grew up. We expect they’ll throw off their leather thongs and make barbarian whoopee, but Yor just wants to talk, because he’s baffled by his accessories.

“It’s like a fire burning inside me,” he says, fingering his Mr. T-sized medallion.” This is the point where I really began to identify with Yor, because my class ring often felt like “a storm raging inside me,” until I realized it was just diarrhea.

The next morning, Yor and Ka-Laa meander until they get jumped by the Ron Perelmans, who proceed to kick Yor’s taut and frequently exposed ass. The chief snatches away the medallion and chucks Yor off a high cliff. Our hero plunges, screaming, to his death, hitting the rocks below with a sickening thud. Then they drag Ka-Laa back to their lair, because she was won in combat, and now rightfully belongs to them, although for tax purposes she’s legally owned by a shell corporation in the Caymans.

But Yor “doesn’t recognize their laws”, including, apparently, the law of gravity, so he stops being dead and climbs back up the cliff. He’s met at the top by Paleo-Jack, who saw the battle but didn’t have time to intervene, because Yor hit the ground faster than a pair of panties on Prom night.

They follow the Perelmans back to their cave, and Yor is just about to charge inside and kick ass, or get ass-kicked, when P-Jack points out “the Beast of the Night” soaring over head. Yor shoots it with an arrow and the beast — a kite with the paper mache body of a moth — drifts gently to the ground. He charges the wounded creature and pummels it with a rock, but still doesn’t find any Smarties or Twizzlers inside.

Meanwhile, Chief Ron beats up all the other Perelmans for the right to party with Ka-Laa, but just before he reaches into his loincloth to release his homo erectus, the Kajagoogoo Boy’s Choir bursts out with a triumphant chorus of “Yor’s World,” while our hero hang-glides across the cave, using the corpse of the paper mache moth.

Yor floods the cave somehow, drowning the Ron Perelmans, then takes Ka-Laa and Paleo-Jack to Penis National Park, which looks a little like a John Ford film, if the tall and craggy formations that loomed over John Wayne in Stagecoach and The Searchers had been ribbed for his pleasure.

Yor kisses Ka-Laa good-bye, leaving her and P-Jack behind as he goes off to find the goddess with the matching commemorative pendant. He wanders through the cock rocks for awhile, until he’s jumped by mud-smeared savages brandishing large, flaming barbecue forks.

Yor snaps into action, spinning on his heel and running away so fast you expect to hear “Yakety Sax” as he shrinks into the distance. But the savages had apparently just returned from a road trip to Wisconsin, and they throw a crapload of firecrackers at him. Yor has a panic attack; then the Mud Dudes gently drape a fishing net over him, and our hero just sort of lays there like a Ken doll under a doily, proving that he’s not exactly the Deadliest Catch.

They drag him into a cave (approximately 71% of this movie takes place in caves, part of a filmmaking incentive program called “Clunkers for Spelunkers”) and we meet Yor’s even blonder female doppleganger, Miss Clairol, who’s rocking a beige cape and a one-piece rawhide swimsuit. They fondle each other’s medallions, then Yor is overcome by a fit of Aryan glee and rhapsodizes, “Now you’re living proof that we represent a race!” He suggests they run off to find their bleached people and breed some Children of the Damned; alas, Miss Clairol serves as the Mud Dudes’ goddess and she’ll first have to submit a vacation request to the HR Department.

Yor says, “Either you release me. Or you kill me. Now.”

Yor snatches a flaming sword that was just sitting there on the coffee table and starts flailing around with it, setting Miss Clairol’s followers on fire. The goddess looks miffed, but before she can give him a written warning, she’s cold-cocked by a falling stalactite.

Yor hustles her outside. Ka-Laa sees her man cradling a blonde floozy in a pemmican unitard and flies into a jealous rage, which she expresses in typical barbarian fashion by starting a Spanish moss collection.

Yor and his companions build a crude raft and light out for the Territories. Along the way, Yor and femme-Yor wander off to be blonde together, and she says, “Do you know I have never belonged to another man,” (please don’t reveal the incredible secret of The Crying Game). Then they kiss, and suddenly it’s all blonde on blonde.

The cave men choose this moment to request a rematch. Yor obligingly attacks the hairy Perelmans, and we get one of those fights you often see in 7-Eleven parking lots, with a lot of pushing, clinching, and the exchange of incoherent cuss words. Meanwhile, Chief Ron knocks Miss Clairol unconscious again. I swear, this woman is worse than Mannix.

She wakes up just in time to die, whispering to Yor, “You see? Dreams…are only dreams,” suggesting that just before the Chief delivered the fatal blow, he asked her, “Any last tautologies?”

Our original trio pushes on, finally reaching the Jersey Shore, where Ka-Laa wades around the surf in her fur boots until they’re soggy and gross, and Yor has to warn her not to drink the ocean because it’s salty. Then some alarmingly nude kids are attacked by a large naugahyde dinosaur in a cave. Yor leaps to their defense, and the giant lizard promptly kicks his ass, then licks him, just to be sassy about it. Fortunately, P-Jack kills the monster with an arrow through the eye, but since he’s old and hairy and has man-boobs, everyone thanks Yor for saving them, and the kids’ dad offers up his nubile Eurasian daughter as a Thank You gift, sort of like the Paleolithic version of the Sports Illustrated sneaker phone.

The villagers tell Yor that a god came to them in a metal bird, but they threw clubs at him and he exploded, leaving behind nothing but the great smell of Brut (and a speaker from a drive-in). Then the FX crew shoots the village with a laser and it blows up, and Ka-Laa cries out, ‘Oh my god!” (Just the one?)

The drive-in speaker squawks out some military radio chatter, leading Yor to deduce that he should scream “Damn talking box!” and fling it across the cave.

The village is a smoldering ruin, most of its people are dead. To thank Yor for protecting them, the survivors give him a boat that looks like a wicker laundry basket, and he sails off toward the setting sun, and his destiny. Ten seconds later it gets a little choppy and he falls overboard, washing up on the shore of Coincidence Island.

Cut to the villain’s lair, where an Emperor Palpatine cosplayer is watching Yor, using the same crystal ball surveillance system the Wicked Witch of the West used to spy on Dorothy. Palpatine points at a robot made from a Darth Vader helmet, the top half of a stormtrooper costume, and a pair of blousy harem pants, and intones menacingly, “The [unintelligible] must be analyzed!”

Storm Darthtrooper finds Yor, but before he can analyze the unintelligible, our hero knocks his head off with a rock. But there are several other robots milling around, equipped with milk cartons on their forearms that emit bad special effects, and cause Yor to swoon.

Despite being savages who’d never seen the sea, Ka-Laa and Paleo-Jack did not fall off the boat, and come ashore like normal people. Palpatine sends his capri-wearing robots after them, but they’re dragged into a cave and rescued by Dr. Carlisle Cullen from the Twilight franchise.

Meanwhile, at Princeton‑Plainsboro Teaching Hospital, Yor is being given an MRI by a Breck Girl. She downloads his complete browser history from the medallion, and finds out he’s a local boy whose real name is “Galahad” (you may commence snickering). He’s also the son of the rebel “Asgard,” who was banished, apparently for being a crappy pilot, because ten seconds after leaving Peroxide Island he crashed and died. Somehow, Yor survived alone in the savage wilderness, living on dinosaur blood and piñata candy.

Dr. Cullen takes Ka-Laa and P-Jack to meet the rebels — survivors of a nuclear war — who are basically the advanced humans from Beneath the Planet of the Apes, but without the gross skin condition. Meanwhile, Yor sneaks out of the MRI machine while Palpatine is monologuing, hoping to escape before they discover he doesn’t have insurance.

Ka-Laa and Yor wander around until they meet up in that hall of mirrors from the climax of The Lady From Shanghai, except now it’s been accessorized with Tiki idols who are enormously proud of their vaginas.

Yor takes Ka-Laa back to the MRI room, because he has a colonoscopy scheduled at 3:00, but then Palpatine teleports in and reveals his whole plan was to get Yor to bring a fertile woman to the island with whom Palpatine could mate. In other words, the guy we’ve been watching this whole time isn’t even the hero of the movie, he’s just the villain’s wingman.

Palp explains there’s a breeding problem, because “many of us carried the germs of the radioactive fallout.” I didn’t realize radiation was bacterial, but it’s nice to know you can survive global thermonuclear war if you just remember to stock up on Echinacea.

Anyway, the whole thing ends up, as you knew it would, in a Wisconsin cheese factory, where everyone trots around the pipes and catwalks and shoots lasers at each other. Even Paleo-Jack is wielding a pulse rifle with deadly accuracy, even though he doesn’t know what a toothbrush or a nit-comb is. The Storm Darthtroopers are pretty easy to kill, but Palp has some even deadlier robots, which you can tell are more advanced because they’re equipped with those plastic neck cones that dogs have to wear after getting spayed.

The neutered bots don’t help, and Yor stabs Palp in the kidney with a barber pole, then blows up the cheese factory, and he and Ka-laa and P-Jack, and all the Cullens and Breck People fly off to the mainland to lord it over the stinky Neanderthals.

The End.

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Scott Clevenger
Scott Clevenger

Written by Scott Clevenger

Screenwriter, blogger, mal vivant. Co-author of “Better Living Through Bad Movies.” Co-host of The Slumgullion podcast. On Twitter @Scottclevenger