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War For The Planet Of The Apes (12A)

Directed by Matt Reeves.


Starring Andy Serkis, Woody Harrelson, Terry Notary, Steve Zahn, Karin Konoval and Amiah Miller. 140 mins. Partly subtitled



The War for The Remakes of The Planet Of The Apes has been decided, and the result is a total and glorious victory. Six summers ago the remake of the fourth film in the original series had seemed like a desperate act but it paid off and now, rather than starting to tail off as franchise fatigue set in, this new series has reached a pinnacle with this third installment. It is bold and brave, a riveting and engrossing drama in a summer where formula, even if it is smart inversions of formula, has dominated.


Bold? Someone has managed to persuade Fox to spend a large amount of money on a summer blockbuster that is predominantly subtitled. (Most of the apes can't speak so communicate through sign language.) There are precious few speaking roles and not much dialogue. The title promises War but there isn't much in the way of action either. All of these three films have put their faith in audiences being prepared to sit and follow a narrative. Granted, narratives that feature big and exciting action sequences, but action sequences that you have to wait for, that the film isn't falling over itself to get to.


The film does occasionally fall back on traditional crowd pleasing moves. The apes adopt a cute mute orphaned girl to tag along with them. They introduce a new character Bad Ape (Zahn,) who is comparatively hairless and resembles Gollum. He's the comic relief, but with a tragic air, a former zoo animal trying to grow out of his conditioning. In some ways it is like a sweeping biblical epic with Caesar (Serkis) as their Moses, trying to lead his apes to a promised land, away from the humans. The film has great scope, and real dramatic weight. It feels like a film from fifty years ago, made with modern capabilities.


Serkis always tries to persuade us that there is a real skill to doing this monkey acting. Watching this though I sense that putting on the monkey make up really helps the actors. Trying to read their simian reactions, their exaggerations and distortions of human communication, is enthralling and there are some exceptional performances here, especially Zahn and Konoval. In the only real human speaking role Harrelson gets to do a pretty good version on Colonel Kurtz, (Ape-pocaylpse Now as the graffiti has it) but he is completely overshadowed by the monkey suited performers he is working with. Probably it was always the case: even in the originals, Roddy McDowell managed to overshadow all the human performers, even though the chimp make-up now looks very primitive.


In the previous part, Dawn, the humans and the apes were jostling for the main role, neither side had grasped possession of the moral high ground, there was good and bad on both sides. The audience followed both sides. Here though we identify only with the apes. Which is quite a subversion; mainstream summer movie often address the end of human civilisation, but few approach it with such death wish enthusiasm. The films see the decline of human society and our surpassing by the Apes as our just fate.


It strikes me that I've been watching Planet of the Apes movies for most of my life, without realising how attached I had become to it. It was always a very strange creation, an allegorical race war whose allegiances were never made clear. Watching these new POTA films has been like an old, traditional, died-in-the-wool-of-his-extra-long-scarf Doctor Who fan being wowed and won over by the new version's creativity and respectfulness. War is full of little nods and visual echoes of the first films – oh, the fans, we love the little nods. It is oddly touching and fulfilling to think back over all the bits of cultural detritus accumulated around it – the Planet of the Apes annual read cover to cover and back again, the TV series, the action figures – and realise that they were bricks on the path to this majestic work. It's possible that mainstream audiences may disagree – say it is too long, too slow, not enough action – but it is my favourite film of the year so far, an ultimate Triumph of the Planet Of The Apes.


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