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Saturday, July 12, 2014

Dawn of the Planet of the Apes- Review (spoiler alert)

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This could become the year's first MEGA BLOCKBUSTER!



Let’s be clear. Before I saw this movie, Edge of Tomorrow was, by far, the best movie of the year, but this film clearly surpassed even that.

Here’s why:

This is the first movie of the year to focus on the eponymous NONHUMAN characters (unlike Transformers).  We get to see the ape society and real character dynamics between the apes, mostly between Caesar, Blue Eyes, and Koba. Blue Eyes, Caesar’s son, is introduced in this installment of Apes, which is set 10 years after the first film. He is a capable individual who sometimes gets ahead of himself in the heat of the moment.

This was revealed in the first scene of the film when Caesar led the apes on a deer hunt. As the hunt drew to a close, the he and his son were separated from the group. Caesar told his son to be still, but he went further astray and crossed paths with a huge bear paw.  His father comes to his aid, but to little avail, as the bear inches closer with its power paw swipes. Caesar then roars for help and his “general,” Koba responds. Caesar tries to “get big” with the bear, but the bear reciprocates, ready to deal the final blow.  Just at that moment, Koba spears the bear and kills it. Caesar is thankful, and Koba tells Blue Eyes that his new scars are signs of strength.

This is possibly the greatest “opening image” of a film when compared to the events to follow.

A large part of the conflict comes when humans wander into ape territory while attempting to repair a hydroelectric dam. Caesar trusts that the humans will not disturb his ape family, but his right hand, Koba, hates Caesar’s attitude and sees it as weakness. This disagreement drives a wedge between the two as the story develops. Koba was experimented on during the events of the first film, and these traumas poisoned him with hatred for ALL humans. His body is riddled with scars from the scientists testing, including his trademark eye scar.

 Through the course of Koba’s boiling hatred, he collects several automatic rifles from the humans’ armory and recruits Caesar’s son, Blue Eyes, into his devious plot. His conflict with Caesar comes to a head when the two fight at the dam over how to deal with the humans. Koba loses, and neglects to tell Caesar of the guns he now controls.

As Koba exits, the humans get the hydroelectric power going and there’s a moment of relief.

In the cover of night, Koba attacks one the humans who shot at Rocket’s son, Ash earlier in the film. Because of this man’s behavior, he was ordered to wait in the truck until the other humans returned.

Koba, now enacting his plan, uses a rifle to shoot Caesar from an unnoticed position. The leader falls to his apparent death, and meanwhile, a fire set earlier by Koba blazes out of control.

Koba takes charge amid the confusion and panic and orders the apes to attack all humans. The apes rush to the human city where they seize the armory. After this the go to the main gates and start all wild shootout battle with the humans. The humans keep the apes at bay for only so long before Koba hijacks a tank and rolls through the front gates. The apes then overpower the humans and cage them all, along with Caesar’s former ape council.

This attack is the absolute climax of the film. Everything that everyone believes in collides in a violent fashion as Koba’s, Caesar’s and the humans’ wills go from cerebral disagreements to visceral destruction.

Koba then orders the capture of humans who escaped the initial assault, and even kills Ash when he refuses to kill a human because “Caesar wouldn’t want this.” Koba’s tactics strike fear into the apes, which is the opposite of how Caesar chose to lead.

The humans at the apes’ home emerge from the forest and stumble across a wounded, but living Caesar [obvious ‘Caesar lives’ imagery]. The humans drive Caesar to his home from the first film, and then plan to go to the ape-controlled human city to get tools for Caesar’s injury. One of the humans run’s into Blue Eyes, who doesn’t want to continue Koba’s incursion, so both go back to Caesar.


After the Caesar group gets back together, they go confront Koba on the large tower in the human city. Unbeknownst to the apes the tower is rigged with explosives, thanks to the human leader.

This takes us to the showdown on the tower: Caesar versus Koba. Their battle is vicious and interrupted when the bombs are detonated.  With a chance to save Koba, Caesar instead drops him to his death at the bottom of the tower.

The ape’s human allies warn them of incoming human forces that can wipeout the apes and tell them to flea. With the ape society in ruins, Caesar decides the apes will stay and fight.

The film ends with the apes bowing before Caesar in preparation for war. This will take us to the next installment, which is under the working title Planet of the Apes.

My only complaint in this film is that there is no gorilla character. There is an orangutan, bonobo, and several chimpanzees, but no ‘Attar-like’ character (since Buck was killed in the previous film) to ‘hold it down.’ 

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