What we have here is a Great Ape movie, perhaps the greatest ape movie. What’s to challenge it? Or them? More than just superapes, these are simian Humphrey Bogarts. The FX wizards having bestowed them with facial tics, they squint and grimace like great moviestars of yore.
In service to a diabolically delicious plot, the apes entertainingly scramble all over the Bay Area, from Twin Peaks in San Francisco to the crown of Muir Woods to a never more iconic Golden Gate Bridge. Winning!
People are the movie’s Achilles’ heel, both in their expressions and intentions. Led by cute couple James Franco and Freida Pinto, the human stars are curiously less expressive than the apes. Perhaps that’s inevitable. W.C. Fields said “Never work with animals or children.” Caesar the chimp hero is a child for most of the movie and a most extraordinary animal throughout.
Intention-wise, the movie’s depiction of humanity ain’t pretty. Some are selfish, others mean, most stupid. So what if that’s how Hollywood movies often depict people these days. It’s a damn poor reflection of the human race, even if it’s necessary to get us to root against our species and for the apes.
OK, it’s just a movie, one that brilliantly sets the stage for apes to take over Earth by destroying humanity, as they must for Charlton Heston to someday discover the Statue of Liberty while walking the beach.1
We humans love to be thrilled, making us satisfied victims of a summer blockbuster that rises as high as RotPotA. We submit, happily.
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1 Apologies if that’s a spoiler for anyone under 50, but it’s kinda basic cultural literacy at this point.
James Franco and Freida Pinto disappoint, he a brilliant scientist who mostly pouts, she a vet who mostly poses, both regularly boggled at the obvious consequences of their actions. Sure Hollywood canon requires that actors live in-the-moment, but these two live a beat behind.
That said, Franco fares better than Pinto, though he’s shaping up as more an ensemble star than an above-the-title leading man.
She’s got a face for the ages, but does nothing to prove that she’ll be more than a beautiful flash in the pan.
John Lithgow gives a great performance as Franco’s dad, a proud man brought low by Alzheimer’s who is then raised to an elevated state of brilliance by his son’s bio-engineered drug. Given only a few short scenes, Lithgow the old pro shows the other humans in the movie what great acting looks like.
Then there’s Caesar, the leader of the pack: inhuman actor Andy Serkis and the geniuses behind the motion capture and other FX make Caesar a revelation, his expressive face reminiscent of Bogie’s Fred C. Dobbs from The Treasure of the Sierra Madre, his mercurial character understandable and admirable. Bravo!!
Finally, an appreciative boo-hiss for Tom Felton, who has a knack for characters we love to hate. Draco Malfoy in Harry Potter, sadistic ape keeper in RotPotA.
Setting a new sci-fi benchmark, this prequel extraordinaire answers questions that have hung in the air for decades while setting up a cartload of sequels. Bravo!
Interesting that Project Nim appeared in theaters right before RotPotA, which is a Project Nim on steroids.
Apes in danger, people in danger, some blood.
What do you get for just under $100 million these days? You get countless FX types, hundreds maybe thousands of them. Oh yeah, you also get 80 stuntmen. The results are extraordinary, a new benchmark in sci-fi movies.
Not that there aren’t some obvious reality liberties.
On the plus side, the movie leaves us with a clear logical path to the first sequel of this generation. The advanced drug that works wonderfully on apes turns out to kill humans. Hmm, how’s that going to play out in the next movie…
Regarding modern marvel’s Review
“To compliment andy serkis on his work as caesar is going to be an understatement no matter how i try; lets simply say that its a revelation and the man deserves every accolade he earned or will earn.” Here, here! Best actor in the movie.
Regarding BigdaddyDave’s Review
Dostoevsky. Cool.
Regarding izzio’s Review
“I pray the sequel won’t be called something ridiculous like Return of the Rise of the Planet of the Apes.” :-]
I also liked “10 points from Slytherin.” Funny.
Regarding BrianSez’s Review
“Hail Caesar!” Indeed.
Regarding jc1986’s Review
You got the basics JC, of the Summary anyway.