Once again, a review for
a franchise that insists on only releasing films when I’m vacationing off the
continent is delayed. The delay extended
because my daughter, who laughed at Carpenter’s The Thing and the original Poltergeist
didn’t want to watch “the scary
monkeys.”
Unpredictability- the
never ending gift of parenthood.
This series started by
accepting the fact all of the fans of the franchise have been rooting for the
apes all along. That builds excessively
in this film.
With the single
exception of the little girl, all the humans we meet in this outing are lacking
in any redeeming qualities. Woody
Harrelson gives a turn as a truly despicable villain.
My daughter didn't have
many notable comments because she was completely engrossed and stared
unflinching most of the story, uttering only the occasional emotion filled
wordless exclamation.
Again, since the apes
are shown to be in the right, and far more compassionate and likeable than
humans, or past ape version, while the narrative moves towards A planet of the
apes, it may not be the classic planet of the apes.
Social commentary
remains important to the franchise, however.
Marginalization of others, and betrayal are highlighted, but also the
strength that comes from honor and loyalty.
The motion capture
effects have continued to improve in quality.
They would be far better defined as “digital makeup” at this point than
animation. The actors are all clearly visible
from within their performances. The veterans
were fantastic as usual, and Steve Zahn was a hysterical, tragic and
heartwarming addition as Bad Ape.
This is a War for the
planet, but not the obvious War. There’s
an external war between factions of humans, but its more the internal War that Caesar
faces which drives the soul of the story.
Don’t get me wrong,
there’s enough awesome battles, apes on horseback and explosions to keep it
visually exciting.
But there’s also the
“humanity” of all the individuals, with conflicts, compromises and character
growth building on all that has come before.
Yeah, there is a bit of Apocalypse Now with “monkeys” going on,
but in a good way on both sides of that statement.
In keeping with the
“rules” of the franchise the key surprise statement has always been in
English. If that is the case, Maurice making
only his second vocalization to name the little human girl he’s adopted would
have to get it, both for the emotion and meaning it carries in story, and the
call back to the original films.
Key
Surprise Statement:
Nova
However, there are other
forms of communication, and I think a more fitting one could be Nova’s use of
sign language to join in with “Apes Together Strong” showing she and they have
accepted her as one of the apes, in contrast to the separatist views of the
humans.
The biggest surprise “vocalization,”
was the lack of verbal expression by Woody Harrelson’s “The Colonel.”
When Ceasar reaches him
for the final confrontation, he is broken and too intoxicated to stand, having
succumbed to the new strain of the simian flu.
Harrelson communicates a great deal more through his eyes than most
interpretations of that scene that I’ve read think is going on.
According to the
Colonel, this new strain of the disease removes the last vestiges and hopes of
humanity by taking away a person’s ability to speak and to reason, rendering
them as mere beasts.
However, we see Nova
throughout the film demonstrate, while she lacks verbal expression, she is
clever, resourceful and able to communicate through gestures, expressions and
the signs Maurice teaches her. The other infected humans shown also have no
visible symptoms other than lack of speech.
The substantial quality
of this franchise keeps growing.
Here’s hoping Andy
Serkis follows in Roddy McDowall’s thumb bearing footprints and plays his own
descendants for future installments.
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