Anyone read the book written in 1963 by Pierre Boulle? Burton's ending comes closer than the 1968 version.
3/24/04 at 2:41pm
| quote: I personally enjoyed the new PotA a lot, especially since I'm a die-hard Burton fan. It was weird and dark ... |
Don
MST3K Review
| Things are different in this script, written by Rick Jaffa and Amanda Silver, which is called Genesis: Apes. Fans will know that Caesar in Conquest is the result of a massive temporal paradox - his parents escaped to 1973 from a far future Earth. Further, Conquest takes place in a dystopian 'future' - 1991 - while Genesis: Apes is set in the modern day. In this version Caesar is the result of a genetic scientist fooling around with the nature of things. When the baby monkey exhibits intelligence and the ability to talk, he takes the cuddly thing home to his wife, who is unable to bear children. Things go surprisingly well for a number of years until Caesar grows up and sees mommy getting attacked. The dutiful son steps in and accidentally kills the attacker. Here's where it takes off. In a scene paralleling Charlton Heston in the cage in the original Planet of the Apes, Caesar ends up in custody at an Ape Conservatory where he and the other apes are abused mercilessly. Caesar finds himself a primate without a world - he's as smart as humans but will never be one of them (and is in fact tortured by them) and he's initially rejected by his monkey brethren. You're on Caesar's side, understanding where this poor outcast is coming from. But then the script gets really ballsy and, just like in Conquest, Caesar begins a campaign to unite the apes and overthrow human society. And his plan isn't a Martin Luther King Jr series of marches, speeches and sit ins - Caesar and his apes take to the streets violently. |
| Well, I personally have never felt that ESCAPE, CONQUEST, and BATTLE lead directly to the events of the original film. Fans of the series have all sorts of differing views on the chronology. |
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Originally Posted by seanOhara
The original series was horrible about continuity -- in the original film, it's clear that Taylor's expedition doesn't expect to see Earth again for several hundred years, but in Beneath NASA sent out a rescue mission; Cornelius, Zira, and Dr. Milo find, repair, and learn to fly the spaceship in the time between their appearance in Beneath and the destruction of the Earth, and Cornelius' explanation of how apes overthrew man is radically different from what's shown in Conquest.
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Originally Posted by Joe Karlosi
The first time around it was an ape named Aldo who said "No" and turned the tables and it probably occurred around 2500 AD; this time it will be Cornelius' own son leading the charge in 1991.
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Originally Posted by DavidPla
But isn't that the biggest continuity error of all? In the first movie we learn that apes think of humans as beasts with no history of intelligence at all. (well, except for Dr. Zaius) They are completely and utterly shocked that Taylor can utter a single word.
Yet in Escape, Cornelius says they were taught when they were young that this ape named Aldo overthrew the humans by saying the first word "No." But we were lead to believe that apes were always taught that they were the one and only dominant species |