Charlton Heston (Colonel George Taylor),
Kim Hunter (Zira), Roddy McDowall (Cornelius), Maurice Evans (Dr Zaius),
Linda Harrison (Nova), Robert Gunner (Landon), Jeff Burton (Dodge),
James Whitmore (President of the Assembly), Lou Wagner (Lucius), James
Daly (Honorious)
PRODUCTION:
Director – Franklin J. Schaffner, Screenplay – Rod Serling & Michael Wilson, Based on the Novel Monkey Planet
by Pierre Boulle, Producer – Arthur P. Jacobs, Photography – Leon
Shamroy, Music – Jerry Goldsmith, Photographic Effects – L.B. Abbott,
Art Cruichshank & Emil Kosa Jr, Makeup – John Chambers, Art
Direction – William Creber & Jack Martin Smith. Production Company –
Apjac/20th Century Fox. USA. 1968.
SYNOPSIS:
A space mission that left Earth in 1972
crashlands on an alien planet. Due to Einsteinian relativity, it is now
the year 3978. The three surviving crew led by Captain George Taylor
trek across a desert. They come to a civilisation only to discover that
on this planet humans are dumb and the culture is ruled by talking apes
that regard humans as mere animals. Taylor is captured and taken to the
Behavioural Science laboratory of the chimpanzee scientists Cornelius
and Zira. He becomes a cause celebre when it is discovered that
he can talk. However, Taylor’s existence becomes a threat to the
Minister of Science Dr Zaius who wants evidence of his existence
eliminated to protect ape society.
COMMENTARY:
This is the film that started off the money-spinning series. Planet of the Apes was one of the biggest science-fiction successes in the period before Star Wars
(1977) and the era of the science-fiction blockbuster. It produced a
then unprecedented four sequels and two tv series spinoffs (see below),
even a popular Marvel comic-book.
Planet of the Apes was an adaptation of an up until then not-so-well-known novel Monkey Planet (1963) by French writer Pierre Boulle, who was best known for the book that became the basis of The Bridge Over the River Kwai (1957). As has been snidely noted in regard to both River Kwai and Planet of the Apes, Pierre Boulle’s books tend to make better films than they read as novels. Monkey Planet tells the same story as Planet of the Apes but in a heavy-handed and polemic way. Planet of the Apes may be a rare case of the film adaptation having fine-tuned and refined the themes of the book.
The script for the film comes from Michael
Wilson, a screenwriter who was blacklisted during the 1950s (who had
also uncreditedly worked on the script for River Kwai), and Rod Serling, who became a genre legend as the creator, host and principal writer of tv’s genre landmark The Twilight Zone (1959-63). After the cancellation of The Twilight Zone,
Rod Serling began to take on film script work, delivering works that
had a strong and ardent political voice with the likes of Seven Days in May (1964) and The Man
(1972). The early scenes here with Charlton Heston delivering a series
of lengthily embittered comments on the human condition are pure Rod
Serling, run through as they are with the frequent cynicism that beset
much of The Twilight Zone and certainly dragged down Serling’s later series Night Gallery
(1969-72). (It appears that Rod Serling delivered the early draft of
the script – a much more elaborately scaled version, which was closer to
the book, and featured the apes living in a technological world
analogous to our own – and that this was later rewritten by Michael
Wilson).
Planet of the Apes
is not exactly a believable scenario. Indeed, it may count as one of
the most incredulous uses of astronauts failing to question the fact
that they are on an alien planet and encounter aliens who just happen to
speak English. The twist ending is a classic, no doubt – in fact, it is
probably one of science-fiction cinema’s most potent and haunting
images – but in retrospect is it any surprise? Nevertheless, what must
be said is that Rod Serling, Michael Wilson and particularly director
Franklin J. Schaffner do much to make the basic premise believable. Planet of the Apes
could easily have toppled over into a cute, gimmicky one-gag novelty.
However, any idea that the film is going to be a cute jokey treatment is dispelled the moment we first see the apes – riding on horseback, shooting at and hunting the humans, then standing over the slaughtered bodies to pose for photos. These scenes are directed with a dramatic urgency with the camera perpetually on the move and make for a bold, exciting beginning.
However, any idea that the film is going to be a cute jokey treatment is dispelled the moment we first see the apes – riding on horseback, shooting at and hunting the humans, then standing over the slaughtered bodies to pose for photos. These scenes are directed with a dramatic urgency with the camera perpetually on the move and make for a bold, exciting beginning.
In the middle of the film, the tone
changes. The violence of the early scenes is replaced by social satire.
Sometimes the satire does not always sit easily. At its worst, it is
merely gimmicky mimicry with people in ape masks satirising human
religious services, posing for photos and particularly the apes doing a
‘See No Evil, Hear No Evil’ gag at the trial. (This latter was in fact a
shot that was ad libbed on the set and kept in after the dailies made
people laugh). At its best, Planet of the Apes
swings a giant satire on the Scopes Monkey Trial, biting at religious
fanaticism with a vehemence and in the end turning around to use the
apes to deliver an embittered comment on the human condition. Rod
Serling and Michael Wilson hit their stride during the trial scenes and
particularly the dialogue put into mouthpiece character of Dr Zaius,
which has a literacy that ranks among the best of screen
science-fiction.
Planet of the Apes is an extremely well made film. The director was Franklin Schaffner, who had previously made the Mediaeval epic The War Lord (1965) and would go onto big-screen historical dramas such as Patton (1970), Nicholas and Alexandra (1971), Papillon (1973) and one other science-fiction film The Boys from Brazil
(1978). The opening scenes have some beautifully expansive widescreen
photography. The Death Valley locations evoke the atmosphere of an alien
planet with stunning regard and the eerily atonal Jerry Goldsmith score
makes a hauntingly evocative background to the scenery.
The performances are all excellent. The usually stocky, inexpressive Charlton Heston even gives a fine performance as Colonel Taylor. Roddy McDowall and Kim Hunter give charmingly chirpy performances and Maurice Evans is excellent as Dr Zaius.
There were four sequels to Planet of the Apes:– Beneath the Planet of the Apes (1970), Escape from the Planet of the Apes (1971), Conquest of the Planet of the Apes (1972) and Battle for the Planet of the Apes (1973). All but the last are well worthwhile. The series was subsequently spun off into a tv series Planet of the Apes
(1974), which only lasted one season and was occasionally better than
many dismiss it as. This was followed by an animated series Return to the Planet of the Apes (1975). Roddy McDowall played three different chimpanzees throughout the different incarnations, appearing in all except Beneath
and the animated series. The films established arguably the most
elaborate Future History of any science-fiction film series, although
both tv series disrupt the continuity established by the films. The film
was remade as Planet of the Apes (2001), which was regarded with general disappointment, and this led to a prequel Rise of the Planet of the Apes (2011) explaining how the apes became intelligent. Behind the Planet of the Apes
(1998) is a documentary that traces the making of the series in some
detail. The film, especially the ending, has been parodied in Spaceballs (1987), Hell Comes to Frogtown (1987), Madagascar (2005) and The Haunted World of El Superbeasto (2009), even an episode of The Simpsons (1989– ).
Review:HERE
Images:Marcus Brooks.
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