Planet of the Apes (1968) Movie Review
Planet of the Apes (1968) Review

"Planet of the Apes (1968)" Overview

Rating: G
1968
Cast and Crew
Director : Franklin J. SchaffnerProducer : Arthur P. Jacobs
Screenwiter : Michael Wilson,Rod Serling
Starring : Charlton Heston,Roddy McDowall,Kim Hunter,Maurice Evans,James Whitmore,James Daly,Linda Harrison
The monkey movie that started it all and the only memorable picture to come out
of the laughable and sometimes unbearable saga of talking ape movies, Planet of
the Apes still beats with a steady heart 30 years after its conception.
This memorable adaptation of the novel Monkey Planet, authored by Pierre Boulle
(the same guy who wrote The Bridge on the River Kwai), was brought to life by
the infamous producer Arthur Jacobs, who eventually oversaw the production
duties for the entire Apes saga. No studio except Fox would touch the project
with a ten-foot pole, despite the participation of Rod Serling, who co-authored
the screenplay adaptation of Boulle's novel (and which led to 30 drafts),
Charlton Heston, Roddy McDowall, and Kim Hunter (Stella from A Streetcar Named
Desire), and the amazing ape makeup by first-timer John Chambers.
Heston plays George Taylor, who along with three fellow space travelers, is
exploring the far reaches of the universe via a time-traveling space shuttle.
Taylor and his crew end up crash-landing on a desolate planet and then set out
across the desert plains to find someone or something on this strange New
World. Heston and his crew eventually find a watering hole, jump in for a
quick skinny dip, and encounter a race of mute humans foraging for food in a
local cornfield. Suddenly, apes appear on horseback with rifles slung across
their shoulders, and Heston's crew is captured during an ugly roundup of the
mute humans.
During Heston's capture and torture, a sympathetic chimp named Kira (Kim
Hunter) takes an interest in Taylor and nurses him back to health since Taylor
took a shot in the throat and can't speak. When Taylor escapes from his cage,
he is chased through the ape plaza and utters those famous words that shock the
ape community. Kira and her husband Cornelius (Roddy McDowall), an
anthropologist with his own theories about ape evolution, take up the defense
of Taylor against an orangutan tribunal led by Dr. Zaius (Maurice Evans) intent
on either castrating or lobotomizing this "talking human." After judgment is
passed (no dice, Chuck), Kira and Cornelius help Taylor and his new girlfried
Nova (Linda Harrison -- the studio head's girlfriend who doesn't utter one word
of dialogue in the entire film) escape from the clutches of the ape community.
Together, the rag-tap group of apes and humans venture into the Forbidden Zone
to discover Taylor's true destiny on this planet of talking monkeys.
Planet of the Apes has stood the test of time because of one key element: its
script. Rod Serling and Michael Wilson, working on the script separately,
managed to construct one of the most diverse and entertaining pieces of cinema
to emerge from the 1960s. The combination of Serling's deft storytelling
abilities shown so strongly in his work on The Twilight Zone with the real-life
political experiences of Michael Wilson -- who was blacklisted by the
Un-American Activities Committee in the 50s -- gave this first Apes movie
everything a successful film needs: intelligent and meaningful dialogue,
rousing action sequences, evolving character development, and a whopper of an
ending.
In the end, the script would have fallen on its face without the acting
abilities of Heston, McDowall, Evans, and Hunter to give the film its memorable
movie characters that have left indelible impressions upon the viewing audience.
Our full Apes coverage:
Planet of the Apes (1968)
Beneath the Planet of the Apes (1970)
Escape from the Planet of the Apes (1971)
Conquest of the Planet of the Apes (1972)
Battle for the Planet of the Apes (1973)
Planet of the Apes (2001 remake)
The only real love... is monkey love.
Reviewer: Max Messier





