Kicking off an intended second modern trilogy, Kingdom of
the Planet of the Apes is a movie that appears to start small and builds
towards a big climax. Yet there’s more to it than that, a real craftsmanship to
every frame, a sense that this is a deeper, broader movie than the title may
suggest. People might scoff at such a thought but regardless of whether you get
the story or even the concept this is a very well posed movie that easily
betters most other films in any iteration since the classic 1968 debut to which
it owes a certain debt.
Set generations after the events of the last film it finds
the long deceased Caesar has attained legendary
status even if sometimes his legacy is being misused by the powerful Proximus
who has taken on the name Caeser in order to spread his authority via his
masked soldiers.Yet he has cherry picked the parts of Caeser’s philosophy that
suit his ends while abandoning the keynote principle of “ape will not harm ape”.
It’s a familiar credo throughout real history.
Amongst the places Proximus’s minions ransack for slaves is
the home of young ape Noa. He seems a more perceptive chimp than most and after
the attack embarks on a quest to find his missing his family and friends joined
by wise orangutan Raka who teaches him some of Caeser’s real philosophy having
access to history books. They also encounter a surprisingly talkative human
girl called Nova who initially seems an
innocent victim of the hunt yet has an agenda (and another name) of her own. When things go wrong Noa
ends up imprisoned with the apes from his colony and others in a settlement
made from old metal buildings sitting by the stormy sea and finds that Proximus
has an unusual aim wanting to open a sealed secure facility built by humans
believing there will be something important inside.
From early sequences showing Noa and his friends searching in
perilous places for eggs, this is a film that brings realism to an unreal
scenario. Wes Ball directed the three Maze Runner movies so has previous
form with action and deploys resources well in setting up several high energy sequences
from the attack on the camp to the already well known chase across long grass
that featured in the trailers. There’s a dramatic scene near the end that mixes
water and apes with admirable chaos.
With less dialogue than most movies and much of it necessarily
simplistic, the film still manages to engage the viewer in between the action. With
sweeping panoramic landscapes, vast horizons of the kind you might expect in a
Western and plenty of detail of the ape’s way of life it creates a vivid picture
of a future where human endeavour is now only represented by faded books, decrepit
buildings, carcasses of ships run aground and incongruous items like the large telescope
the party find. Some scenes are wordless as we see Noa exploring the world
beyond his village. The tussle between nature and civilisation has never looked
so interesting as it does in these wide screen moments.
Yet there’s as much intimate stuff to enjoy. The ape’s faces
are reproducing the expressions of the actors hence are immensely more flexible
than the rubber masks used in the Seventies movies allowing for a much deeper
understanding from the viewer as to what they are thinking or feeling. What’s
also very impressive is the way that real ape traits are mixed with the more
developed aspects of these primates. There's also an intriguing connection between the apes and eagles.
The film takes its time to get where its going, setting a
steady pace that reminds me of older movies where not every moment had to be
chocked full of action and urgency. Admittedly some may find this a little wearing
but it all ties together very well by the end. I’d say the only weaker aspect
is the plot which never really matches the visuals or the acting and makes some
predictable moves to the extent that I correctly predicted the final half hour
before it happened. Even so this is a cinematic achievement best seen in, yes,
a cinema!
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