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Planet
of the Apes (1968)
In Franklin J. Schaffner's original, thought-provoking
and engrossing sci-fi film of the long-running series, a twisting
time-travel adventure with an effective, politically-charged message
of social commentary - about a post-apocalyptic, post-nuclear futuristic
planet (Earth) with evolved, highly-intelligent talking apes. It
was a loose adaptation (by formerly blacklisted Michael Wilson and Twilight
Zone's Rod Serling) of the Pierre Boulle novel La Planète
Des Singes (Monkey Planet).
The G-rated, 112-minute sci-fi adventure film became
well-known for its iconic, chilling, and startling twist-ending - no
longer a secret. The ending depicted a
post-apocalyptic, post-nuclear futuristic planet (Earth) - revealed
in the film's conclusion by a half-submerged Statue of
Liberty.
The colorful Panavision film provided solid entertainment
value and created momentum for science-fiction cinema. Its
advanced make-up techniques reversed the social positions of intelligent
humans and brutal apes to slyly criticize and satirize racial and
class stereotypes. It also examined the effects of technology upon
humankind.
The Vietnam War, Cold War and Civil Rights era film made many subtle
points about race, animal rights, the establishment, class, xenophobia
and discrimination. The film was most celebrated for its Oscar-winning
make-up artistry of the civilized, evolved yet dictatorial ape-like
creatures.
- in the film's pre-credits opening sequence, a US
spacecraft (with four NASA astronauts) was launched in early 1972
from Cape Kennedy; and now, six months later, in terms of Earth-time,
it was 700 years later (March of 2673)
- during a brief interlude in the flight, the lead
astronaut Col. 'George' Taylor (Charlton Heston), a misanthropic
who had left Earth because he hated humanity, wondered if humans
on Earth were still engaged in warfare, or enabling starvation
of their neighbor's children
- after completing his final log report and a fully-automated
touchdown-landing sequence was initiated, Taylor joined his fellow
astronauts in deep sleep as the ship went into auto-pilot; twelve
months later at the end of the journey (marking a total of 18 months
in space), over two thousand years had passed on Earth; it was
now the year 3978 - a total of 2,006 years later and almost two
millennia after blast-off; the astronauts had traveled for centuries
in cyrogenic suspension (and deep sleep) and at the speed of light,
and had aged by only 20 months - proving the theory of relativity
John Landon (Robert Gunner)
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Dodge (Jeff Burton)
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Escape From Sinking Spacecraft on Yellow Raft
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- after the title credits, the
astronauts' spacecraft crash-landed into a lake (and sank) on a
strange, Earth-like, desolate planet; only
three had survived the journey: Col. Taylor, John Landon (Robert
Gunner), and African-American Dodge (Jeff Burton); blonde female
astronaut Lt. Stewart (uncredited Dianne Stanley) had died in stasis
- although they didn't know it, they had landed in
a strange and remote Earth-like area that would later be known
as "The Forbidden Zone"; Taylor hypothesized that they were about
320 light-years from Earth on an unnamed planet in orbit around
a star in the constellation of Orion
- as the ship sank, the three stranded astronauts
paddled in a yellow raft to the shore of a rocky desert, and assessed
that they had three days of food and water, a pistol with ammo,
some medical supplies, and a camera; before heading off, Landon
planted a small American flag into
the rocky soil; as they proceeded along, Taylor admitted that he
had forsaken Earth altogether, and was optimistic about a
better world elsewhere: "I can't help thinking
somewhere in the universe there has to be something
better than man. Has to be"
- they discovered signs of life - flowering desert
plants - and also suspected that they were being watched by
hidden figures atop the rocky cliffs; in a more lush area, they
came upon a fence-like or border structure of five wooden crosses
- humanoid scare-crow figures; they approached a waterfall oasis,
and the threesome took time out for a skinny-dip swim,
discovered humanoid footprints in wet sand, and soon after, realized
that primitive (feral and mute), bi-pedal men, women, and children
had ripped up their clothing and damaged their supplies; the harmless
people wore animal skins and loin-cloths; they appeared to be vegetarians
- stripping a fruit tree and gathering food from a cultivated cornfield
One of Primitive Natives Later Named 'Nova' (Linda Hamilton)
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Humans, Including Astronauts, Hunted
by Ape-Gorillas
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- suddenly, there was a ferocious roar from the woods,
scaring the primitive creatures who created a stampede as they were
hunted and pursued in a cornfield by horse-back riding, armed and
uniformed, hairy-faced gorillas (apes of the film's title); during
the cavalry charge on horseback, the desperate, fleeing primitives
were caught by various nets, traps, and snares; Taylor was shot
in the throat (damaging his throat's voice-box), Dodge was
shot and killed (and later placed as a display in a museum), and
Landon was knocked unconscious with a severe head wound and captured
(and later subjected to a lobotomy); the apes posed for
photos with their captured prey
- the injured Taylor was put
into a crude, horse-drawn wooden wagon-cage by the brutal apes,
taken prisoner and transported along many natives, including
a black-haired female, to "Ape City" (composed of a complex of adobe huts);
the injured primitives were regarded
as stinking dirty "animals" or "beasts"
by their ape-captors, and by two chimpanzee
scientist-doctors who treated them: Dr. Zira (Kim Hunter), an animal
psychologist, and Dr. Galen (Wright King), a surgeon; Taylor was
operated upon and treated for his neck wound (removal of the bullet),
while he was at first paired up in a cage with
the pretty captive, mute female primitive with black hair,
who was later named Nova (Linda Harrison)
Main Ape Society Characters
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Chimpanzee Surgeon Dr. Galen (Wright King)
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Chimpanzee Animal Behavioral Psychologist Dr. Zira (Kim Hunter)
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Gorilla-Jailer Julius (Buck Kartalian)
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Minister of Science Orangutan Dr. Zaius (Maurice Evans)
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Scientist-Archaeologist Dr. Cornelius (Roddy McDowall)
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Animal Affairs Commissioner Dr. Maximus (Woodrow Parfrey)
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- Taylor shockingly
realized that he had been temporarily rendered mute; the imprisoned
and rounded-up caged humans were also mute and inarticulate
and could only grunt; Zira's nickname for recovering patient Taylor was "Bright
Eyes" - jailkeeper-gorilla Julius (Buck Kartalian) noticed about
Taylor: "He keeps pretending he can talk," but
Dr. Zira thought more was happening: "He's keeps trying to form
words"; Julius sarcastically believed it was only mimicry: "You know
what they say. Human see, human do"; Dr. Zira was fascinated
by "Bright Eyes" and his intelligence
- Dr. Zira's higher-up administrative
boss, an orange-colored orangutan named Dr. Zaius (Maurice Evans),
the Minister of Science, was summoned to see the unique human prisoner;
the malevolent, arrogant, government leader mocked
Taylor's attempt to talk: "Yes, amusing. A man acting like
an ape...He has a definite gift for mimicry"; he was disapproving
of Dr. Zira's behavioral animal studies: ("To suggest that we
can learn anything about the simian nature from a study of man is
sheer nonsense"), and also spiteful of all humans: "Besides,
man is a nuisance. He eats up his food supplies in the forest, then
migrates to our green belts and ravages our crops. The sooner he
is exterminated, the better. It's a question of simian survival"
- shortly later, Dr. Zira ordered Nova to be caged
with Taylor so that they could pair up or mate - but the pretty,
expressionless female primitive could only sniff at him
- the ape society appeared to be dominated by
English-speaking simians who lived in a multi-layered
civilization. Humans (who possessed few rights) had been reduced
to primitive, subservient mute slaves and were even hunted for sport
as animals. The three layers of society included gorillas (war-like
enforcers, military, police, guards, hunters and common laborers),
orangutans (gov't leaders, administrators, politicians, the ruling
elite, lawyers and religious figures), and chimpanzees (the intellectuals,
scientists and doctors); at the bottom were humans, considered
feral animals (for experimentation and slave labor)
- later, outdoors in a large caged enclosure, Taylor attempted to communicate by
writing in the dirt in big capital letters: "I CAN WRITE,"
but Nova innocently wiped away the message; after
Taylor found that he couldn't speak and explain himself to Dr.
Zaius and to Dr. Zira (with her fiancee - archaeologist Dr. Cornelius
(Roddy McDowall)), Taylor was suppressed with a painful neck restraint
and led back to an indoor cage
- now confined in an indoor cage, Taylor scribbled
on Dr. Zira's stolen note pad: "MY NAME IS TAYLOR" and
stunned her; she immediately ordered his release to her own
home to study him further, even though it was against the
rules; Dr. Zira and her fiancee Dr. Cornelius were intrigued that
"Bright Eyes" appeared to be a very intelligent, rational human who
could understand English, read and write; Taylor tried to convince
them that he had arrived in a space vehicle from another planet,
and created a paper airplane to demonstrate flight; Taylor was then
shown a map of the local area, including the "greenbelts" of
the ape civilization's communities in the west, and further to the
east a lifeless desert and barren mountain known as "THE FORBIDDEN
ZONE" that Taylor claimed he had traversed to get to the ape-inhabited area
- Zira and Cornelius speculated about the idea that the apes had evolved from
a lower order of primate, possibly man, who had lived in the area
of the Forbidden Zone and developed a culture older than recorded
time; Dr. Cornelius had already conducted an archaeologist
expedition into the so-called 'Forbidden Zone' where Taylor's ship
crashed, to search for artifacts and evidence of a civilization
predating the Apes; it was possible that Taylor was an evolved
"mutation, a missing link between the
unevolved primate and the ape"; Taylor insisted with another
note: "I AM NOT A MISSING LINK"
- suddenly, Dr. Zaius entered with Animal Affairs
Commissioner Dr. Maximus (Woodrow Parfrey) after they had learned
of Dr. Zira's infraction of the rules by bringing the subject to
her home; Dr. Zaius noticed the "toy" paper airplane on the floor
and crumpled it up; Dr. Zaius was fearful
that the human had both the ability to reason and to understand
technology - two major threats to the ape society; Taylor was muzzled
and gorilla-guards led him back to his indoor cage in the compound
- in one of the cages, Taylor overheard
that Dr. Zaius had personally ordered him to be
gelded (emasculated or castrated) within five minutes; during Taylor's
attempted escape from "Ape City," he first took refuge
in a church during an ape funeral, and then discovered
a simian natural history museum display or exhibit of his fellow
astronaut - Dodge, now a stuffed and eyeless corpse; after struggling
to getr away, after he was finally caught in a net in the marketplace
and was taken under the jurisdiction of the Ministry of Science,
Taylor delivered snarling and defiant insults toward the ruling apes,
and spoke for the first time, now that his throat had healed: ("Take
your stinkin' paws off me, you damn dirty ape!")
- after a number of weeks, Taylor
had been recaged with Nova and was under observation; but then
when it was decided that the two - regretfully - should be separated
into different cages (and Julius restrained him by spraying
him with a high-powered water hose to keep him at bay), he wildly
screamed out: "Damn you, you hairy scum!...It's
a madhouse. A madhouse!"
- gorilla-guards strapped a leather collar (with leash)
around Taylor's neck, bound his wrists behind his back, and led
him to a chamber inquiry room and assembly hall to be investigated
by an ad-hoc tribunal hearing of the National Ministry - it was to
rule and decide on his fate; three main presiding officials (all
orangutans) entered, mounted the dias and took their seats (l to
r): Dr. Zaius, Academy-Ministry President (James Whitmore), and
Commissioner for Animal Affairs Dr. Maximus (Woodrow Parfrey),
in addition to the state's prosecutor, Dr. Honorious (James Daly),
the Deputy Minister of Justice; Taylor was to be defended by his
counselors Zira and Cornelius; Taylor was forced to stand in the
middle of the room during the hearing in the kangaroo court
- it was soon clear that Dr. Zaius' real
purpose for convening the tribunal was to indict Zira and Cornelius
for scientific heresy (for promulgating the theory of evolution);
although Taylor was able to speak and wished to defend himself,
the gorilla-Bailiff forcibly restrained and silenced him; Dr. Honorious
went into a long diatribe about how the ape was created in God's
image and was a superior being with a "divine spark," and that
humans had no rights and no soul; he also proclaimed that only
apes should study apes
- to prove that the ability of "Bright
Eyes" to
speak was only a hoax after his surgical operation by a "corrupt"
surgeon named Dr. Galen, Dr. Honorious proposed a direct examination
of Taylor by asking questions about Ape history and culture and the
Apes' Articles of Faith that he simply could not answer
At the Tribunal Hearing of the National Ministry
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Taylor Defended by Zira and Cornelius
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Three Tribunal Judges
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Dr. Honorious (James Daly) - The State's Prosecutor
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- Taylor could also not prove, through a written statement
briefly read by Cornelius, that he had arrived in a spaceship (that
had sunk) with two "talking" and
"intelligent" astronaut-companions; a group of "all
the surviving humans that were captured in the hunt" were assembled
in the outdoor amphitheatre, including Nova and Landon; a
fresh, large scar on his forehead revealed his crude lobotomy and
his severe catatonic state; Taylor shouted at Dr. Zaius: "You
cut up his brain, you bloody baboon!"
- back inside the courtroom, Zaius testified (falsely)
that Landon suffered a head injury due to being shot and never could
talk; again, Taylor spoke out: "You cut out
his memory! You took his identity! And that's what you want to
do to me," before he was gagged
- Dr.
Cornelius affirmed that there wasn't enough proof of Taylor's interplanetary
travel, but there was proof that the human had come from somewhere
in the past in the Forbidden Zone, because he had accurately described
it; he described how he had dug up human artifacts during an archaeology
trip a year earlier to the Zone; his theory that Taylor had come
from a civilization predating the apes that lived in the Forbidden
Zone was denounced as heresy; Dr. Zira even speculated that Taylor
might have sprung up from their own planet!
- the three officials at the
front of the tribunal assumed the "See No Evil, Hear No Evil,
Speak No Evil" pose imitating the wise monkeys of Japanese culture - they could not
face the truth of Dr. Zira's theories, and denounced Dr. Cornelius'
idea that Taylor was the 'missing link' between humans and their evolved ape superiors;
Zira and Cornelius were charged with contempt of court, and the
hearing was promptly adjourned, and they would
later be brought to trial for heresy
- in Dr. Zaius' private office after the verdict was
in, the noble and arrogant Science Minister pronounced judgment
on Taylor as a "final disposition"; he theorized to Taylor that
he must admit that he was a member of a mutant tribe, and admitted
that he was probably a "missing
link"; he also suspected that Taylor was from some other area beyond the
Forbidden Zone; Taylor kept insisting that he came from the past from another planet in
a different solar system, and then asked pointedly: "I know who I
am. But who are you? How in hell did this upside-down civilization get started?"
- to silence him for being a problematic "menace, a walking pestilence," Taylor
was given six hours to make a "full confession" (or fabricate
lies) about his origins, or he would be emasculated and the subject of experimental brain surgery
- Dr. Zira's young nephew Lucius (Lou Wagner) helped
Taylor escape from his cage, along with Nova, to take a journey-expedition
with Dr. Zira and Dr. Cornelius (also now fugitives) into the quarantined
area known as the Forbidden Zone, to return to the dig-site where
Cornelius had excavated over a year earlier, and the location of Taylor's
crashed spacecraft
Escape and Journey Into the Forbidden Zone
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Dr. Cornelius' Beachfront Archaeological Cave Dig-Site
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Pursuit by Dr. Zaius and Armed Gorillas
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- Dr. Zaius and armed gorilla-police mounted on horseback
pursued them to their beachfront campsite; Taylor held them off
with a rifle and a truce was called; under pressure, Zaius agreed
that if Cornelius could prove his theories and show evidence
of a civilization or another culture older than the 1,200 year-old "Sacred
Scrolls" written by the ape's Lawgiver, Zaius
would release him from heresy charges
- with the highly-skeptical chief-of-state orangutan Dr. Zaius accompanying
the group into the excavated cave site, Cornelius revealed
the artifacts he had earlier found there - bones and remains from
a civilization about 2,000 years ago - including remnants of a
dirty, porcelain human doll, that was found beside the jawbone
of a man - scientific proof that an advanced culture of humans
had existed first before the apes became masters; the
remnants also included a set of false teeth, a twisted pair of
eyeglasses, and a pre-fabricated heart valve
- when the battered human doll spoke: "Mama,
Mama!", Taylor asked the speechless Zaius: "Would an ape make a human
doll that talks?"; his assertion supported Cornelius'
work that proved the superiority of humans over apes - although
for some reason, the superior humans hadn't survived due to some
catastrophic event
- the group was interrupted
by a brief firefight outside when the gorilla-apes threatened to seize
them; Taylor forced a promise from the apes
to retreat (by holding Dr. Zaius as a hostage), and to let
him and Nova escape (with a horse, a week's supplies, and ammunition)
further into the Forbidden Zone
- Taylor also summarized for everyone that there
were humans like himself before the apes who once held superior
technology, but were somehow wiped out, and apes had somehow
descended from humans; Dr. Zaius confirmed that the apes' Sacred Scrolls (29, verse 6) had
revealed a cover-up for the masses about a dangerous, ancient human
civilization - the truth was that savage, murderous, war-like Earth
dwellers had destroyed the planet; a reading of the scroll by Dr.
Cornelius confirmed Dr. Zaius' fear of the humans' need
to destroy each other: "Beware the beast man, for he is the devil's
pawn. Alone among God's primates, he kills for sport or lust or
greed. Yea, he will murder his brother to possess his brother's
land. Let him not breed in great numbers, for he will make a desert
of his home and yours. Shun him, drive him back into his jungle
lair, for he is the harbinger of death"
- before leaving and while saying his goodbyes, Taylor
gave an incredulous kiss to sympathetic chimpanzee Dr. Zira:
(Taylor: "Doctor, I'd like to kiss you goodbye"
Dr. Zira: "All right, but you're so damned ugly")
- Dr. Zaius added a final footnote about his knowledge
of the destructive nature of the earlier human race: "I
have always known about man. From the evidence, I believe his wisdom
must walk hand in hand with his idiocy. His emotions must rule
his brain. He must be a warlike creature who gives battle to everything
around him, even himself...The Forbidden Zone was once a paradise.
Your breed made a desert of it, ages ago"; Taylor wanted to
know more, but Zaius cautioned ominously - presumably he knew that
ages ago, the human race had destroyed civilization: "Don't
look for it, Taylor. You may not like what you find"
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Dr. Zaius' Confirmation of the Earlier
Human Race's Destructive Nature
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- after Taylor and Nova departed,
Zaius ordered explosives detonated to seal up the
cave (with evidence of humans and their earlier society: "In
a few minutes, there will be no doll. There can't be"); Zira
and Cornelius were arrested and would both stand trial for heresy,
without evidence or proof of previous human origins to exonerate
them; Dr. Zaius attempted to shift blame and claimed his actions
would ensure the future of the ape society: ("I may just have saved
it for you"); he also stated that Taylor would find "his destiny"
- in the startling, twist-surprise ending, as Taylor
(and Nova) left the group to explore further into the out-of-bounds
Forbidden Zone, he rode down a beach on horseback when he suddenly
stopped, dismounted, and stared upwards;
as the camera panned toward Taylor, through a spiked object, he
had two major reactions; he first exclaimed: "Oh, my God!
I'm back, I'm home. All the time, it was...", but then he
sank and dropped to his knees: "We finally really did it"
The Twist Surprise Ending: Taylor on Horseback Riding Down a Beach Shoreline
in the Forbidden Zone With Mute Nova, Before Dismounting and
Staring Upwards
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- he pounded his fist into the sand and railed against
Earth's generations almost 2,000 years earlier that had destroyed
his home planet's civilization with a devastating nuclear war,
and that apes had become dominant on Earth - as Dr. Zaius had mentioned;
he uttered the film's final line of dialogue: "You maniacs!
You blew it up! Ah, damn you! Goddamn you all to hell!"
- in a final shocking revelation, the full object came
into view as the camera panned backward - it was the spiked crown
of a battered Statue of Liberty that was buried waist-deep in beach
sand, signifying that Taylor was still on Earth!
- the end title credits played without musical accompaniment;
the only sound was the ever-present rhythmic waves pounding the shore
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In Space, It was the Year 2637 (Measured
in Earth Time), But It Was Only Six Months After the Early 1972 Launch
Lead Astronaut: Col. 'George' Taylor (Charlton Heston)
Crash-Landing Before Rowing Away in a Yellow Raft
Five Wooden-Cross Scarecrow Figures - A Border Fence?
Realizing Their Clothes Were Stolen During Swim
Primitive, Feral Native Humans in Cornfield
Dodge Shot Dead
Taylor Shot in Throat
Natives Captured by Gorillas
Injured Taylor Struggling to Speak
Taylor's Note Written in Sand: "I CAN WRITE" Wiped Away By Nova
Taylor's Scribbled Note on Dr. Zira's Stolen Notepad: "MY NAME IS
TAYLOR"
Dr. Zira's Stunned Reaction to Taylor's Note
Cornelius Holding Taylor's Paper-Airplane Demonstrating Flight
Cornelius' Map of the Local Area
Taylor Muzzled and Led Back to an Indoor Cage
After His Escape, Taylor Hid in a Church During an Ape Funeral
Taylor Shocked by Stuffed Corpse of Astronaut Dodge Displayed
in a Museum
Taylor Caught, and His
Rebuke Toward the Apes: "Take
your stinkin' paws off me..."
In a Cage, Taylor Restrained With a High-Powered Hose: "It's
a madhouse!"
Taylor's Insult to Dr. Zaius Regarding Landon's Lobotomy
Scar: "You cut up his brain, you bloody baboon!"
Taylor: "You cut out his memory! You took his identity!..."
Taylor's Tribunal Hearing - and The Pose of the Three
Judges: "See
No Evil, Hear No Evil, Speak No Evil"
Taylor Sentenced in Private by Dr. Zaius for Being a Problematic "Menace"
Human Doll Found in Cave Artifacts by Dr. Cornelius
Taylor: "Would an ape make a human doll that talks?"
Taylor Seizing Dr. Zaius and Taking Him Hostage
Taylor Making Preparations to Leave with Nova
Taylor's Departure Kiss with Dr. Zira
"Oh my God!"
"I'm back. I'm home. All the time, it was..."
"We finally really did it. You maniacs!
You blew it up! Ah, damn you! Goddamn you all to hell!"
The Shocking Final Image
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