Rating:
***/*****, or 6/10
Third
sequel to the original Planet of the Apes film from 1968.
After the overall lighter tone from its predecessor Escape from
the Planet of the Apes (1971),
the franchise takes a much darker turn in this film, as we finally
witness the origin of the apes and their hatred towards mankind. In
the not too distant future (1991, so don't worry, it didn't happen),
a mysterious disease has wiped out all cats and dogs, so apes are
kept as replacements pets, but are soon found to be more suitable for
slave labour and as such are ruthlessly exploited by their human
overlords in a gritty dystopian setting. The son of former 'future
apes' Zira and Cornelius, dubbed Caesar (played by Roddy McDowall,
who previously performed Cornelius as well) by his human surrogate
father (all too small part for Ricardo 'Khan' Montalban), finds
himself without his protector who is viciously brutalized and killed
by the human regime – it's not an all too happy future for humans
either – after which he finds himself amongst his fellow simians
and becomes their Messiah. Under Caesar's command, the apes rise in
revolt and violence sweeps the nation as they fight for their freedom
and start a conflict that will change the fate of the world. Easily
the most controversial and most violent entry into the franchise, as
the provocative display of abused and chained apes evokes haunting
imagery of human slavery based on racial segregation, which is of
course a parallel that has driven the continuing overall plot since
the first film, but is most effectively fleshed out here. It is also
painfully reminiscent of the race riots of the late sixties and early
seventies, something the writers sure were aware of. Despite its
convincing and intriguing social parallels, the fairly limited budget
and resulting small scale look of the film hinder the impact of the
story on a visual level for looking so cheap. Plus, the clear
delineation between good apes and bad humans makes for pretty
two-dimensional, oversimplified characterization. The plot was
partially appropriated to great acclaim by the latest Planet of
the Apes reboot, Rise of the Planet of the Apes (2011),
thankfully resulting in grander imagery.
Starring:
Roddy McDowall, Don Murray, Ricardo Montalban
Directed
by J. Lee Thompson
USA: 20th
Century-Fox, 1972
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