Dawn of the Planet of the Apes: Age of Ape-Pocalypse

Too many big-budget franchise entries these days rely on Hollywood's standard four-word formula for sequels and reboots: the same, but more! (22 Jump Street did a surprisingly great job of parodying this tendency by going out of its way to play up all the ways it was an unnecessary, overstuffed sequel.)
The biggest strength of the new Planet of the Apes film, Dawn of the Planet of the Apes, is that it's not content to tread the same path as its predecessor. It ditches the entire human cast from the great Rise of the Planet of the Apes (sorry, James Franco) and tells a completely ape-centric story, where humans are the strangers and intruders into the simian world. Instead of a rehash, it's a totally new story that takes place in a world created by the events of the first film. And it works really, really well. From my review:
It's rare for big-budget, effects-driven film franchises to risk alienating fans by trying something new.
And yet those rare genre sequels that do attempt to expand their worlds and stories often turn out to be some of the most memorable and successful: Movies like "Aliens," "Terminator 2," "Star Trek: The Wrath of Khan" and "The Dark Knight" took real creative risks — and surpassed their predecessors in the process.
Now we can add another film to that list: "Dawn of the Planet of the Apes" is both a great sequel and a great movie — a film that expands brilliantly on its already strong source material, and makes a case for itself as the best movie of the summer.
"Dawn" picks up shortly after where 2011's "Rise of the Planet of the Apes" left off: That film, a sort of prequel to 1968's "Planet of the Apes" set in the present, ended with a group of intelligent apes, led by a chimpanzee named Caeser (Andy Serkis), forming their own society just outside of San Francisco.
In "Dawn," they're still at large, but now the world's humans are largely gone. Most of the population was wiped out by the same disease that lifted Caesar and his tribe to human-level intelligence.
The movie welcomes viewers to the monkey house from the very first shot, which starts on Caesar's eyes, and pulls slowly back to reveal an older, wiser, more grizzled version of the young chimp who stole so much of the show in "Rise." It's an announcement that this is a movie made from his perspective, about the coming of his world — and the sad, slow end of ours: It's life after the ape-pocalypse.
There are still a few humans left, of course, and it's the tense relations between humans and simians that make up the bulk of the movie, which builds its conflict out of an all-too-believably plotted cycle of violence and reprisal.
The reversed perspective is the movie's best trick, and director Matt Reeves pulls it off almost perfectly, bringing viewers fully into the primitive tribal society the apes have created.
Read the complete review in The Washington Times. Read Kurt Loder's review for Reason here.
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22 Jump Street was a lot of fun.
I don't see how that's possible, since it starred Jonah Hill.
Hey WTF, why don't you go piss your pants?
Hey, don't blame me for Jonah Hill.
I'm over here in my unit, isolated and alone, eating my terrible tasting food, and I have to look over at that. That looks like the most fun I've ever seen in my entire life, and it's B.S. - excuse my language. I'm just saying that I wash and dry; I'm like a single mother. Look, we all know home-ec is a joke - no offense - it's just that everyone takes this class to get an A, and it's bullshit - and I'm sorry. I'm not putting down your profession, but it's just the way I feel. I don't want to sit here, all by myself, cooking this shitty food - no offense - and I just think that I don't need to cook tiramisu. Am I going to be a chef? No. There's three weeks left of school, give me a fuckin' break! I'm sorry for cursing.
Okay, I'll admit I enjoyed Superbad.
The CGI work looks pretty unconvincing in the commercials.
I don't know, Gary Oldman looks almost like a real person.
Shut up u CUNT!
This may be the first summer blockbuster I've watched in years.
Which is funny, because I used to go almost every weekend through the summer. I dunno if the summer movies used to be a lot better, I got old and snobby, or I just used to get better pot. Could be a combination, I guess.
What? No Michael Bay erupting explosion extravaganzas?
Not since the first Transformers. Which may be the last summer blockbuster I watched as God intended, in a theater with sticky floors and cellphones going off constantly.
I hate people more than I like the big screen and sound.
So do what I do: take off work in the middle of the day. Never a crowded theater.
Edge of Tomorrow is a lot of fun, if you feel like getting back into summer blockbusters with a vengeance.
Yes, it has Tom Cruise. But also Emily Blunt.
APE CULTURE, SHITLORDS
Check your hairy privilege
Loder already did it.
Still waiting for the musical.
Chimpan-A to Chimpan-Z
Dr. Zaius Dr. Zaius
Rock me Dr. Zaius
I love legitimate theater.
I love you, Dr. Zaius!
I was hoping it was a sequel to This is the End.
It'd be like Dominion, except with boobs and drugs and profligate f-bombs.
Meh. As far as "ape" movies go, I prefer Jackson's 2005 remake of King Kong. There's more jaw-snapping trex action than you can shake a stick at.
The problem with Jackson is his movies have limited re-watch value because they are so damn long.
I have no qualms about watching the entire LOTR trilogy over again for the umpteenth time. But that may be just because I love those movies, and the books.
I bet you like po-ta-toes too
Only if they're boiled, mashed, and stuck in a stew.
I think a monkey is long overdue to win an Academy Award.
According to Hollywood lore the first Besf Actor Oscar was supposed to go to Rin Tin Tin in 1928.
But they felt no one would take them seriously so they gave it to German actor and future Nazi propagandist Emil Jannings.
After the war Jannings would walk around Berlin carrying his Oscar as proof of his identity.
The marginalization of monkey-actors has persisted ever since King Kong.
They should do a movie where the apes have their own Hitler. His ranting would make for great youtubes.
What would have happened if Apeler didn't try to invade England?
Hermann Goerangutan would bomb them every night.
Wait, didn't we already have Chimpy McBushitler?
I thought that was pretty much every one of the ape movies.
I always saw Caesar as a chimp totalitarian slaver, because that's exactly what he was.
When it was revealed to me that the movies were actually about race in America I came to realize that Hollywood was filled with racist shitweasels with a fascism fetish.
You're not getting it. Ape-olph Hitler is in the monkey bunker - or munker, if you will - and he just found out that General Coco did not attack the northern flank as ordered. He goes into a rage throwing his feces all over the munker and the rest is great entertainment.
Is zees your shimpanzee minkey?
Zee one wiss zee bimb?
As if calling the ape leader "Caesar" was not an obvious clue.
Et tu, Cheetah?
Which primates are the Jews, then? SPOILER ALERT: I haven't seen the movie yet but I'm guessing the Rhesus monkeys.
Humans.
Spoiler alert.
Chimpy McHitler?
Its been done.
Dammit! Too slow.
[does the eyepointing thing at WTF]
speaking of, um never mind, Lebron James is back in Cleveland.
To be a pallbearer?
I was hoping we'd finally get to talk about Lucy.
Loved the first one, and can't wait to see this one over the weekend. However, I have a minor nit... I've long said that a sequel cannot be greater than the original. For starters, without the original there could never be a sequel. In addition, the sequel has an unfair advantage because it doesn't have to spend the whole first act introducing the characters and situations. And finally, the first film can generally stand alone whereas the sequel cannot ('Aliens' may be an exception to this rule). In closing, a sequel can be every bit as good and possibly more entertaining than the original, but it can never be better.
One need not watch Rise to understand the movie. The intro explains that a virus swept throughout Earth, killing almost all of humanity.
Movies like "Aliens," "Terminator 2," "Star Trek: The Wrath of Khan" and "The Dark Knight" took real creative risks ? and surpassed their predecessors in the process.
To be fair, 80% of the fan fiction plots would have surpassed Star Trek I.
You mean the original Star Trek motion picture, not the 2009 reboot?