Because of the two recent well received additions to the
POTA series, I decided to rewatch Tim Burton's much derided attempt at
rebooting the PLANET OF THE APES franchise from 2001. This film is generally
disliked by both hardcore fans and the movie going public but I enjoyed it
pretty well when I caught it theatrically and have never really understood the
level of hatred directed toward this it. I never thought it was anywhere near
as good as the original but it wasn't the crapfest everyone screamed about,
either. So it was time to revisit the movie in question and reassess it in
light of the franchise's rebirth and new health.
First, I must say that the two strongest elements of the
2001 film are the amazing score by Danny Elfman and the brilliant makeup
effects by the legendary Rick Baker. I really enjoy the apes effects in the new
movies but the apes in this film are superior to my eyes. The reality of them
is tangible in a way that even the best CGI will never accomplish- these are
real actors in prosthetic pieces and costumes that look and bend correctly and
add a level of realism to the images that makes for a better visual experience
for me. At the very least, I'm not constantly looking for mistakes in the CGI
rendering to see the sloppy spots that distract me. Real actors in real makeup
will always trump CGI for me. Sorry.
But with those two elements noted I have to admit that I
don't find POTA (2001) to be as enjoyable as I once did. I'll lay out my
thoughts like this-
1. The script seems to have been tailored to be a Tim Burton
film instead of an Apes film. By this I mean that there is an overuse of jokey
dialog and silly remarks that constantly call attention to themselves. Dressing
up standard human conceits (bitchy formal dinner parties, sexual humor, jokes
about hormonal teenagers, concerns about fashion, etc) in Ape Talk is silly and
insulting if all you are going to do is point and giggle. If you are not making
a point, plot or otherwise, there is no reason for it. We don't need a dozen examples
of this culture being a distorted mirror image of human culture- a couple will
do fine. This is too often done just to illicit a laugh and this isn't supposed
to be a comedy.
2. I remember thinking that the film had been seriously
edited down because several transitions were too fast. By this I mean story
information seems to have been cut out in an effort to keep the film under two
hours. On this viewing I still think it may have been too brutally edited but I
also suspect things were just not scripted that needed to be in the story.
Where is the conversation between our human astronaut and his fellow captive
humans in the wagon pen on the journey to Ape City ?
Where is ANY conversation with his fellow prisoners until he is placed in the
kitchen of his new owners? This is illogical and stands out as a major script
problem. No one would keep their mouths shut in these circumstances. Why are we
not given some time with the other humans to get a sense of them and their
world? These people are not dumb brutes like in the original film so they must
have stories to tell and information to impart to our fish out of water
protagonist. Why aren't they doing this? Tribes are later mentioned so why not
ask him where he comes from and about his odd clothes?
3. This may seem minor but I found it really distracting
that characters would just disappear. For instance, when Paul Giamatti's slave-trader
character shows up to reclaim his property he has two big enforcer gorillas
with him but after Leo uses his blaster they are just gone. Poof! They weren't
killed and we don't see them run off- they are just edited out of the picture
somehow. Why not give us an idea of what the Hell happened to them?
4. If you are going to have two characters make lovey eyes at
each other there needs to be some payoff or you need to leave that aspect of
the story out. If Helena Bonham Carter wants to get her freak on with the
exotic human astronaut - fine. But do something about it or leave it out of
your already complicated tale. If you are going to hint at interspecies sex
either pull the trigger or leave the weapon on the shelf.
As you can tell from these remarks I don't think as highly
as I once did of the film. It plays like a film that was pushed into production
too soon and almost as if the script wasn't finished. I suspect that it was a
patch job of several ideas done to get a movie made during a window in Burton 's schedule. He has
remarked that he had little control over the film from the beginning and I can
believe it. This is one of the least 'Tim Burton' looking movies of his career
and the Burton
touches all seem plastered on like the jokey dialog and silly
characterizations.
I can't say I dislike the film as I feel it has too many
good elements to wave away, but it is a mess and unlike most viewers I love the
bizarre out of nowhere ending of the film. It is very much a throwback to the
source novel by Pierre Boulle and for that reason alone I would like it. But
the questions it raises with its final image of General Thade as a revered
founding father still puts a smile on my face today. What a wonderfully strange
idea to end the film! Maybe I'm the only one this appeals to but I seriously
love the possible mad futures this could have created if this film had not been
so loathed.
This is my least favorite POTA film but I still like it a
little. I guess I'm just a hopeless fanboy!
3 comments:
Fox selected a release date before they had a director and knowing they had a really lousy script. They didn't care about anything except making their release date.
I once had a conversation with Frank Darabont about this. He is a big Apes fan and was approached to direct. He told them their script was awful, and he volunteered to tell them why. They didn't care. They just kept offering it to directors until Tim Burton said yes. Who knows why Burton took it on, but my guess is he needed the money or thought he'd get some cachet from it. In any case, he was rushed from the get-go, which is the other reason, according to Frank, that so many people turned it down.
Simply dreadful. I actually had some optimism for it until the night before its release, when Fox ran a TV special about the film---and showed way too much. When Giamatti's character uttered, "Can't we all just get along?" I knew that this wasn't anything I wanted to see. I did finally watch it out of curiosity when it aired on Fox the following year, and I couldn't believe that it was even worse than I'd dreaded. I have never seen the film a second time, and I have no interest in doing so.
There is no 2001 Apes in my world!
Hunter
I understand what you say and even sympathize- but I still enjoy it. Not a lot.... but a little. As I said, the music and makeup are excellent and (as i should have said) the cast works their asses off but it fails in the long term. I consider it an alternate variation on the classic series and the bump needed to get to what we have today.
Like you, Rod, I love the fantastic ape makeup in this (all except for Helena Bonham Carter's Michael Jackson-like chimp, that is,) and also how most of the ape actors moved... I wish that kind of simian body language had been incorporated into the '68 original.
But the script is just dreadful.
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