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Gotta say, the practical effects make up for the Apes holds up almost 50 years later. They look great, no CGI needed just great actors under the make up.
Absolutely, they are totally indistinguishable from real chimpansees - the size, the upright walk, the short arms and long legs, the faces, the missing fangs and the elvis hairstyle...not to mention their reluctance to throw around their own faeces when angry
@@EveryoneElseIsWeirdImNormalThey would look good no doubt. I just feel like the endless capabilities with CGI would change the original stories. The original ones were in the 60’s and didn’t even have that big of a budget. There were supposed to be more to it.
First saw beneath at the pictures when it was first released. The cinema was packed. The ending was so sad that kids , myself included, I was eight I think, were crying. The adults were quiet , the whole cinema , was virtually silent as people left. A big contrast to the cheers when the movie started.
I really wish we could’ve seen that deleted sequence for the beginning of the film featuring the destruction of the earth… I love this film, have loved it since I first saw it as a kid on TV. Can’t get enough of those damn dirty ape‘s!
When I saw this movie I was only 4 years old and they killed off Cornelius and Zira I remember leaving the drive-in wanting to cry but my mother reminded me was just a movie. She didn't want to take me to see the next movie because she figured it would upset me again, but when we got to see it we were all happy the Apes got Redemption over the humans. Please do a conquest and the battle for the Planet of the Apes.
It's a great movie, I've always loved it, but I can never quite get away from the idea that the apes could not possibly have even found Taylor's ship, much less salvaged it and made it airworthy again. It was at the bottom of a lake in the Forbidden Zone! Some have said it was Brent's ship that they found, but that was a burnt-out wreck, and would clearly never fly again. No, this story could not have transpired. Only in the days before video, rapid TV syndication and on-demand streaming, could film makers rely on the forgetfulness of their audience, and get away with such a gigantic hole in plot development.
Dr. Otto Hasslein knew it wouldn't work but didn't tell anyone. He programed the "Otto" the auto pilot to repair the Icarus and return the crew back to 1973. He was surprised when they found apes on the Icarus.
1:12, "The script throws logic out the window".....AMEN. To enjoy this movie you MUST be able to say to yourself, "It's just a MOVIE, so go with it....."
Cornelius loosing his temper and killing the waiter with his superior chimpanzee strength, is one thing they got right, rather than chimps being seen as cute harmless creatures... Different story now though.... Not seen as cute and harmless now but very formidable animals
Just watched this again after seeing it years ago as a child and can’t get away with how awful it was for zira to swap the chimp baby’s condemning the ‘normal’ chimp to death
The film was a reflection of the changes in Hollywood going on at the time. It was one of a generation of dark and dystopian looks at the future based on cultural changes (some real and others just imagined) of the time. Hollywood would get so obsessed with this that the public ran to films like Star Wars when they came out.
Soylent Green, Logan's Run, Omega Man, Clockwork Orange, THX-1138 among other dystopian movies were getting pumped out regularly. These and disaster movies were all the rage when I was a kid. Then Spielberg did JAWS and these types of moves were passe and killer animals were now all the rage.
@@Rockhound6165 Very true and remember that the SciFi movies were the end of it all and depression films. Irwin Allen was still churning out disaster hits where people banded together and solved the crisis before them.
@Robert Croes that wasn't the most boring part. The most boring part was the Ape protest and how we were meant to take James Franciscus' performance as a bootleg Taylor seriously
Escape is the most family-friendly out of all the Apes movies, though it does pull a dark ending punch. But it's also the most hoaky out of the series. Personally, I much prefer Beneath over this cash-grab movie.
I think that Beneath is perhaps the most UNDERRATED of the original Planet of the Apes movies. But Battle was probably the worst. It was totally anti-climactic. It was just an unnecessary sequel (much like Toy Story 4!). 🦍
@Enzo 1965 Are you talking about the original script for Beneath or Escape? What was the difference between Paul Dean's treatment and what we actually got on the screen? Just wondering . . . 🤔
I was a huge POTA fan when I was a pre teen. I had all of the plastic model kits, the comic books, and the hard to find red, tin, trash can in my bedroom. I think I drove my parents crazy over my obsession. One thing I loved was the local ABC affiliate in Detroit, where I grew up, had an afternoon movie before the evening news. They always ran “Planet of the Apes” week in February every year. It just so happened it was shown the week of my birthday, it was like an extra birthday treat for me when I was a boy. Every once in a while I’ll watch the original first movie and remember how excited I’d get every time I saw it. I remember how disappointed I was when the television series was canceled when I was in junior high. After that, I lost interest in all things ape, and discovered disco music. I remember the year “Dick Clark’s Rockin’ New Years Eve” featured a new group called “The Village People”. I was more than curious, realizing my crush on James Franciscus was a little more involved than I wanted to admit. In the mis 80’s, I found myself invited to an after party for TVP. I could hardly believe that the young boy who loved POTA, was a few years later meeting and socializing with The Village People. It’s been a weird life.
This was a great film. A reversal of the original film. In a way Beneath was the final movie; and Escape and the movies that followed were prequels. It was like a temporal paradox whereby the two apes go back in time and actually bring about the future of the earth as seen in the first two movies.
Exactly. This is the only way to accurately view the timeline of the original series of films. The world being destroyed at the end of Beneath was the end, and Escape, Conquest and Battle all act as prequels telling the story of how the Apes world came to be in the first place. I personally love all the films in the franchise.
@@johnbowles5399 that's what I had believed since I first saw the movies in the early 80s. I've read a few comments recently in which people suggest that the timeline was changed and thus the series actually ends on a positive note. I rewatched Escape, Conquest and Battle and I think they make a good case. Characters in all three refer to changing history through time travel. The argument is that Caesar displaced Aldo as the leader of the revolution and thus brought forth a gentler society. The main counter argument is that the statue of Caesar cries at the end of Battle right after the Law Giver says that the dead know the future.
Correct. If you watch Beneath the Planet of the Apes was last in chronological order. Menendez, in Beaneath, was 27th generation when his father was 26 generations prior in Battle For the Planet of The Apes. Escape was actually the first in chronologiacl order since it took place in 1973 (although the film was made in '71 as you know) since it too two years for Austronaut Taylor's crew to be gone in space.
The five films have a nice circular time paradox timeline. It would have been great if the films could have been tied in to each other a little better, but hindsight is a great thing. For example, it would have been a nice plot point to add in "Beneath" showing that Brent came alone to look for Taylor and didn't crash his ship, landing it safely just outside the Forbidden Zone. There could then be a scene where Doctor Milo finds the ship and goes inside, curiously pressing buttons etc. That could have closed the plot hole as to how the three apes managed to get a ship and come back in time in "Escape"
I believe Aldo WAS meant to be the leader of the Ape revolution, but then Ceasar came in and took that away from him. If Also HAD lead the revolution, we would have gotten the Apes society we saw in the first film. But since Ceasar lead it instead, the timeline has changed.
Also, if you listen to Cornelius and Zira's telling of the ape uprising, Aldo led the revolution 300 or 400 years later than when Caesar did in Conquest. IIRC Caesar's rise was in Conquest was in the 1980's while Cornelius and Zira kept on referring to the ape evolution happening over a period of centuries.
I thought there was only one movie called "Plane of the Apes" when I was growing up. It wasn't until high school that a friend told me there were sequels. I had no idea there were 5 films until I watched them all in college and was BLOWN away by how good they were. Some were better than others but when you watch them all back to back, it's a great story.
I got to see the first 4 movies during their theatrical releases. The first 3 were at our local drive in with my family and the 4th was in a regular theater.
I liked the Ricardo Montalban character. He should've been explored further in Escape and Conquest. The same with Dr. Milo played by Sal Mineo who was killed off too soon.
Yes, Cornelius did say Aldo. That's why, in the 5th film, the ending makes it clear that, if Aldo had gained control, he would have killed the humans. But, because Cesar maintained control, they lived and became equal to apes again. The narration even points out that history can be changed.
That makes sense but I always assumed that the ape historians overtime wrote Caesar out of the books and praised Aldo who was militant towards the humans that they hated. The 5th film ending takes place in like 2600 AD which is still a long while until the 4000s and that statue of Ceasar crying alluded to this new peace between humans and apes wouldnt last and thus being a time paradox
No. It was accidental that Claude Akins' character in the 5th film shared the same name as the ape that said "No!" That's in every book I've read about the series.
Aldo was in the 4th film, “Conquest”, but did not speak and wasn’t really a featured character at all. An error I think on the writer’s part - that would have tied the storyline together much better if Aldo had been featured. It was the Roddy McDowall show unfortunately, and a little more spreading of the wealth as far as the script was concerned would have made things much better. Still a great film and and series, though. My all-time favorite.
The explanation of the restoration of the Starship is simple Taylor spoke of being a space Traveler and I can imagine dr. Zaius and the Imperial Senate ordering troops to be sent out into the forbidden zone to see if there was any truth to the matter of the spaceship it was a threat to the security of the Simeon state that had to be investigated and alleviated the ship could have washed ashore and therefore would be investigated by one of their top chimpanzee scientist Milo could have found technical manuals in the ship that explain the functions of the various controls the ship was in one piece with the launch segment when it sank the Shockwave of Earth's destruction could have separated the two parts of the vessel catapulting the control cabin backwards into the past Landon might have been interrogated by the ape governments before they surgically killed him in the comic book Edition he is interrogated by the Apes
They knew they could not give Sarah and Cornelius a happy ending it was given a realistic ending and that's what made it so good for it to have a happy ending would have been false and phony
I adore these films - _faults and all!_ This one in particular holds a place in my heart. If only because I used to have the book and record. I listened to that so many times as a kid. 👱🏻♂️ Thanks for another great video!
To this day I still cannot watch the end scene when they die. It just breaks my heart. Cornelius falling was just brutal. My major issue with the movie is that our heroes were somehow able to FIND the ship, much less raise it, repair it and somehow get it to launch into orbit. There's just no good explanation for that. Even if Milo was some kind of engineer what the heck did he know about rocketry and space craft?!
He'd have to first locate the ship, repair it back to usable form (it was at the bottom of the lake in a place called the forbidden zone), figure out and manufacture the rocket fuel, build the launch vehicle (what landed on Earth was just the crew compartment), repair or build the astronaut suits, launch the rocket and then navigate it in such a way so that it would travel through space and time and land back on Earth, something that even the original astronauts had no idea or intention of doing. This would all have to happen in a few seconds after the doomsday missile launched and before it exploded and destroyed the world, presumably. This is what happens when the accountants get a hold of the script.
@@HC-cb4yp the “shock wave” of Earth’s destruction causing the space ship to travel back in time doesn’t even follow the laws of physics, since according to Heston in POTA the spaceship traveled at near light speed and was capable of future time travel, not back in time and the “deleted” rocket escape opening is still on RU-vid ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-XpxfnVIA5DM.html
@@ObamaFromKenya Thanks for the link! I'm glad they thought to TRY and explain it. I think sci fi types just need an ATTEMPT at explaining the unexplainable...
The idea of injecting a family-friendly, light-hearted, funny episode into a Sci-Fi series was repeated with the movie The Voyage Home in the Star Trek franchise in 1986.
The 3rd film I’ve always had a struggled with ,it’s not my favorite but you can’t really do without it ,it’s the main film that ties the beginning and the end ,it’s the centerpiece of this masterpiece done so many years ago that still holds up.
@@ghshinn this was as they say in the video a “re set” film to begin the series again. BTW the actual escape from future Earth in Charlton Heston’s spaceship sequence is on RU-vid ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-XpxfnVIA5DM.html
I Totally! agree, I love the planet off the Apes1,3 4. the best & I have and love the TV series. I wish it ran longer than 3 months😢 thank you for the video😍😃💜
Dr. Zira didn't just "dissect" human beings; she "vivisected" them 😱 That means they were still alive while she was CARVING then up. Yikes! Watch the movie and listen to her if you don't believe it.
Some members of Ape society did know the truth about humans. Cornelius says he learnt about it in ancient scrolls. It would have been better to have him explain that Dr Zaius told him the truth. After Cornelius and Zira saw the talking human doll at the end of Planet of the Apes he may as well have come clean with them - and swear them to secrecy.
I agree with your positive review of this movie, and the point that Kim Hunter and Roddy M were excellent; they are very underrated actors and their performances really elevated this movie. I was always curious about the point Cornelius made about how their society remembered their history; my assumption was that he was making that up because he didn't want the humans to think that the ape society was ignorant of the past or that he had been struggling to bring the truth against the establishment that didn't want the truth to come out. In other words, he lied to give the humans a different impression of what the reality was. I suppose it could have been a continuity error, but it would be too glaring an error, since the oppression of history was such a major theme in the first movie.
A very well conceived project and the beginning of the pardox the movies together represent. Sad and thought provoking McDowell and Hunter are incredible in the roles. Not my favorite because the ending is very hard to watch but continues the dark endings set by the first film and is in every film but the last
Great video! Was not aware that the "Dr. Milo" actor had been murdered. Very sad. "Escape" is actually my favorite of all the "Planet of the Apes" films. I recently rewatched the entire series of movies, the television series, and the animated series--and Escape still remains my favorite. It's also interesting in that it appears to create a divergence point in the timeline, one which becomes even more apparent in the following two films--which appear to portray a second timeline in which humans and apes coexist (somewhat) more equally in the sense that humans remain intelligent, if somewhat second class. That trend carries on into the live action television series, which more or less picks up down the road from where "Battle" left off (with the minor continuity issue that dogs are a little less extinct than Ricardo Montalban let on in "Conquest," but he may have been exaggerating). :-)
@Moonjumper Reviews: Who Cares What I Think the actor playing Dr Milo couldn’t stand to be in the ape makeup and said he was leaving production so the writers killed him off
@Michael DeRosa his memory of how they found Taylor’s spaceship at the bottom of a lake, repaired it, using their 18th century at best understanding of science, built a device to launch the ship moments before Taylor detonates the Doomsday weapon, watching the time calendar on the control panel and realizing they are traveling through time, you mean those memories? The spaceship sequence still exists here’s the link ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-XpxfnVIA5DM.html
"Escape" is a great movie because it showed apes being the alien beings in a human world, reversing the first movie's premise. A wonderful concept turned into a compelling film.
It would have been so easy to overcome the big discontinuity concerning apes' knowledge of their culture's origins. The original movie, while making it quite clear that apes in general do not know the truth, very strongly suggests that Zaius did know, at least much of it. Roddy McDowall's dialog should have been written to have him say that Zaius told them about it before setting off to the Forbidden Zone, or that they found the records afterwards. One thing that was also not explained, and maybe could not have been, was exactly when and why the three chimps found and took flight in the space ship (was it Taylor's or Brent's?). maybe something was established in the deleted scene, but they can have had no idea that the world was literally about to end. It would be interesting to know if they had intentionally gone back in time, just on an exploratory mission, or if they had some other reason for wanting to escape from their own place and time. I always wondered why the character of Milo was even in the story, since he was killed off so soon and barely any lines. He served no purpose to the story. It is interesting to learn that he originally had a more prominent part but Mineo decided he wanted out.
Brent's ship was totally destroyed upon its landing (and nobody knew where his ship was) so it was Taylor's that had to be used but it isn't a launch vehicle. Milo's only purpose was to present the character who made the trip possible but in no way was it possible for their tech to make that happen.
@@Pascalore @Odysseus Rex the deleted scene exists on RU-vid and shows a rocket launching Taylor’s capsule into orbit moments before Taylor detonates the doomsday weapon and Earth is destroyed. So somehow the apes created a rocket with fuel, fixed the spacesuits, and escaped just in time, then the shock wave of the earth’s destruction flung the space ship back in time . Hard to believe. ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-XpxfnVIA5DM.html
It was a decent sequel, but it was a real stretch of belief to believe that the apes could have retrieved & repaired Taylor's sunken ship & then launch it into space
Scanning through all the comments on this ( and other similar videos ) it seems that many viewers are asking about HOW was the Icarus ship actually powered, and HOW did the 3 Apes manage to get away from the Earth, just before our hero Taylor destroyed the planet ? Whenever anyone asks, I am putting the following explanation... Hope this makes sense... Please google... Liberty 2 Lander... and check out images... On the original POTA film, we never saw the lower half of the ship...The theory is that, when contact was lost with Taylor, then Earth sent out TWO rescue ships... One was a 4 man crew ship, the same as Taylor's ship, piloted by Skipper ( with 3 empty seats ), and the other was a 3 man crew ship, piloted by Brent ( with 2 empty seats )... So now we are at the start of Beneath the POTA film, and Skipper's ship has crashed on the desert... Note that we never see Brent's ship, but we must assume that it landed successfully in the upright position... Move forward to the end, where Taylor presses the doomsday button... We can assume that Brent told Cornelius, Zira and Milo where his ship was located, and that all they had to do was to go on board, and sit back and press the auto-pilot button, and the ship would take off and return to Earth... So, our hero Taylor has destroyed the Earth, and the 3 Apes have witnessed it, as they take off ( As Zira described watching the horizon turn orange )... Now we start the film Escape from the POTA, and we see Brent's 3 man crew ship being pulled out of the water ( Note... NOT Taylor's 4 man crew ship )... I think this is the only possible explanation as to how the 3 Apes return to Earth in a different ship to Taylor's ship...
I wonder even more about how they could possibly find and retrieve it from the bottom of a lake in the middle of the Forbidden Zone, and repair it as well all in a very short time. But luckily, off screen events kind of work like a type of magic in Hollywood films, so no further explanations are required.
It wasn't Taylor's ship !!!! It was Brent's fully operational 3 seater ship... Scanning through all the comments on this ( and other similar videos ) it seems that many viewers are asking about HOW was the Icarus ship actually powered, and HOW did the 3 Apes manage to get away from the Earth, just before our hero Taylor destroyed the planet ? Whenever anyone asks, I am putting the following explanation... Hope this makes sense... Please google... Liberty 2 Lander... and check out images... On the original POTA film, we never saw the lower half of the ship...The theory is that, when contact was lost with Taylor, then Earth sent out TWO rescue ships... One was a 4 man crew ship, the same as Taylor's ship, piloted by Skipper ( with 3 empty seats ), and the other was a 3 man crew ship, piloted by Brent ( with 2 empty seats )... So now we are at the start of Beneath the POTA film, and Skipper's ship has crashed on the desert... Note that we never see Brent's ship, but we must assume that it landed successfully in the upright position... Move forward to the end, where Taylor presses the doomsday button... We can assume that Brent told Cornelius, Zira and Milo where his ship was located, and that all they had to do was to go on board, and sit back and press the auto-pilot button, and the ship would take off and return to Earth... So, our hero Taylor has destroyed the Earth, and the 3 Apes have witnessed it, as they take off ( As Zira described watching the horizon turn orange )... Now we start the film Escape from the POTA, and we see Brent's 3 man crew ship being pulled out of the water ( Note... NOT Taylor's 4 man crew ship )... I think this is the only possible explanation as to how the 3 Apes return to Earth in a different ship to Taylor's ship...
@@tsopmocful1958 It wasn't Taylor's ship !!!! It was Brent's fully operational 3 seater ship... HOW did the 3 Apes manage to get away from the Earth, just before our hero Taylor destroyed the planet ? Whenever anyone asks, I am putting the following explanation... Hope this makes sense... Please google... Liberty 2 Lander... and check out images... On the original POTA film, we never saw the lower half of the ship...The theory is that, when contact was lost with Taylor, then Earth sent out TWO rescue ships... One was a 4 man crew ship, the same as Taylor's ship, piloted by Skipper ( with 3 empty seats ), and the other was a 3 man crew ship, piloted by Brent ( with 2 empty seats )... So now we are at the start of Beneath the POTA film, and Skipper's ship has crashed on the desert... Note that we never see Brent's ship, but we must assume that it landed successfully in the upright position... Move forward to the end, where Taylor presses the doomsday button... We can assume that Brent told Cornelius, Zira and Milo where his ship was located, and that all they had to do was to go on board, and sit back and press the auto-pilot button, and the ship would take off and return to Earth... So, our hero Taylor has destroyed the Earth, and the 3 Apes have witnessed it, as they take off ( As Zira described watching the horizon turn orange )... Now we start the film Escape from the POTA, and we see Brent's 3 man crew ship being pulled out of the water ( Note... NOT Taylor's 4 man crew ship )... I think this is the only possible explanation as to how the 3 Apes return to Earth in a different ship to Taylor's ship...
Omfg, I’m listening to this video with headphones and when Kim Hunter starts talking, it felt like she was hovering over my left shoulder!!! 😂 It scared the shirt out of me!
It bears mentioning again that Pierre Boulle’s 1963 novel incorporates more story elements and plot devices into “Escape” than it does in the original film-the pregnancy, the zoo incarceration, the interrogation, the high order of civilization experienced by the “astronauts”, the caring of the “offspring”, the council hearing...and most especially the revelations about man and ape roles/evolution in the distant past. The original novel comes highly recommended!
Yeah true. I remember reading the book as a freshman and being surprised that the Ape society was already technologically advanced and they didnt even speak English. Ulysses tries to prove himself to the ape leaders who hear him out but become paranoid that he and his future son will eventually create a human rebellion
Final Countdown, Whoa imagine instead of going into the past to pearl harbor, what if that anomaly sent the Nimitz to the future, and at time of the planet of the Apes !!! The Ape Army would have no answer to that !! Maybe those mutants would use mind control over the crew, but probably not. Would've made for a cool movie.
I think it was aldo which explains why it took longer for them in the og time line for apes to take over cuz it would be more natural. Since they went back in time and has birth to baby that’s advance which speeded up the whole process of take over and since Cesar leads now changed the out come of the original timeline making humans and apes live peacefully . Pretty much a time loop
I loved all the POTA films. Back in the day I was a real are 'nut'. I saw all the movies and collected much of the abundant merchandise that filled the toy shops back then. I also still now a couple of used Apes make-up appliances. One from the TV series and one from the second movie. They're now crunchy as hell, but I still treasure them. lol
Hello, Im new here, is there any chance you can increase your mic volume? It seems pretty low in most of your videos. Besides that I enjoy your nostalgic content. Thank you.
After all these years, I’m still impressed how Dr. Milo was able to salvage Taylor’s ship and no less program it and launch it. Perhaps, he cannibalized Brent’s ship lol
Slight problem. At the end of the original film, Dr. Zayus (or however you spell it) revealed to Zira and Cornelius that it WAS known that Humans were once the masters.
It would’ve been nice if they would’ve some how placed Taylor and his crew boarding their ship ,then taking of and later a report “Astronaut’s lost in space” then the Apes arrive and they think it’s the crew returning back to Earth. The capsule is retrieved and out walks the apes. Now that would been a hell of a dramatic opening.
11:17 I have an idea to fix this in future stories if they ever go back to the original series. This holiday was from much earlier in ape history and Cornelius learned about it. It was forgotten over time either simply due to how things are often forgotten over the span of centuries or the government simply buried it because of how "offensive" it was to apes of that era that they were ever dumb brutes serving the now dumb humans. Even with the "triumph" narrative tacked on that was a part of the history. Also, the names of people change over time and maybe Aldo's kin/descendants purposefully changed that narrative to make him the hero instead of Caesar. Look at what rl humans have done throughout the ages. Would this be any different?
That changed narrative, about Aldo, leading a revolution, is plausible as a revision, because the first movie makes it clear that the leaders of the ape society had put a lot of work into suppressing their past. The only thing that doesn’t really track is, how the central characters suddenly know the details of a history that they only started to discover by the end of the first movie. I can’t remember the third one very well at all, being a kid when it was new. But, wasn’t there any, “patch,” scene? Maybe their stuffing some, previously undiscovered, “historical documents,” into their luggage, just before fleeing in their spacecraft? Probably not? I guess that ideas about respecting sci fi fans, and their strict notions of, “canon,” were not a thing in the early 70’s? Really enjoy your work. Thanks 👍
This is my wife's favorite in the franchise. I wish they would have used the spaceship view of the Earth's destruction. Seems odd that it would be excluded from the final cut.
@BronzeAgeBryon the spaceship view of Earth’s destruction is on RU-vid and violates laws of physics and common sense. How would the apes know there would be a shockwave created by the doomsday weapon Taylor ignites if they didn’t know it existed to begin with and why would a shock wave in space send a spaceship back in time. Now one of the apes says I don’t understand the ships clocks are reversing or something to that effect but if they had knowledge of s shockwave in space they didn’t understand time travel? The whole escape in Taylor’s spaceship which last seen was at the bottom of a lake in the Forbidden Zone is ridiculous ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-XpxfnVIA5DM.html
Can't help but feel they jumped the shark a bit on this one. Studio execs think you can do anything with the story because 'science fiction' but for sci-fi to work, you have to remain true to the universe you've created with it. This movie broke that.
Great review and insight. I loved the original series of movies. I liked the film with Mark Walhberg but the latest remake I wasn't too crazy about it. It just didn't have the same chemistry or mystique of the original films. Interesting that critics rip Beneath the Planet of the apes. That was probably my 2nd favorite of the sequels. I just watched Escape again. The ending is very brutal and sad.
After three of the Apes videos, I've grown accustomed to your endearing "Plana" of the Apes and also forgive you for your near-universal mispronunciations of all the character names along with your countless factual inaccuracies.
Series started in time travel so the was obvious choice was to go back since earth was obliterated lol. I remember watching this movie very young, writing is pure genius.
@Blue Snags the writing is “genius” except the whole Dr Milo raising Taylor’s spaceship from the lake, repairing it, creating a launch device and escaping just as Taylor detonates the Doomsday weapon which creates a shockwave which sends Dr Milo who somehow has the 2 other apes with him, and they travel back to 1970s Southern California, that time travel ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-XpxfnVIA5DM.html
@@ObamaFromKenya I know, I think they painted themselves in a corner on that one for sequels. Escape is still a great movie nontheless for what it is and it continued for two more. You might need to ignore some common knowledge and embrace the 70 sci fi.
Escape from the Planet of the Apes was undoubtedly the weakest of the 5. The virus that killed all the dogs and cats is the virus that Cornelius, Zira, and Milo bring back from the furure. I didn't at first really care for Beneath but after several viewings its quite good. Conquest was probably my second favorite after The original Apes movie.
I just watched both back to back today. Beneath still had fantasy, Escape is largely a comedy. It's such a weird turn and after the first two it's disappointing.
This was always on my mind - bearing in mind I haven't seen the last two since I was a kid. I know the years these were to have taken place were really wonky, too. Cornelius fathered Caesar - and then Caesar went on to call his son Cornelius. Little Cornelius died...is it possible that, had he not died, he would have grown up to be Cornelius Sr.? Kind of like a circle? They weren't really consistent with the years. It wouldn't make sense if they were consistent with the years because Little Cornelius and Big Cornelius were over 3000 years apart.
Once you overlook the premise, this was a very entertaining film that was both satirical and ominous. Humanity finally got a glimpse of what the future was like and would eventually go to any length to see that future changed. This film eventually shows that history was changed somewhat because this Ape civilization started in California rather than New York and, in a loose way, set the stage for the tv series.
@Bender IsGreat yes the premise 3 apes with no understanding of the laws of physics aside from what a 18th or 19th century scientist might have could escape in Charlton Heston’s spaceship and land in the Pacific is hard to accept. Here’s the actual escape scene which never made it to the film ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-XpxfnVIA5DM.html