REEL CRITICS
“Get your hands off me you damn, dirty ape.” Famous words uttered to
dramatic effect by Academy Award-winning actor Charleton Heston in the
original 1968 film “Planet of the Apes.”
These words are spoken -- nearly -- once again in the newly revised
“Planet of the Apes” movie; only this time they are cleverly presented
with a bit of a different twist.
The same can be said of the entirely new “Planet of the Apes” film,
directed by Tim Burton and starring Mark Wahlberg in Heston’s role as a
downed American astronaut on an upside-down, backward planet where apes
rule and humans are considered the animals. The new version is similar in
many ways to the original, yet with different twists mixed in.
“Marky Mark” Wahlberg is surrounded by a swinging new funky bunch this
time around as Leo Davidson, captain on a U.S. Air Force deep space
research vessel that sends genetically enhanced space-simians on missions
too dangerous for humans. On one such mission, Wahlberg’s star pupil
chimp flies into a mysterious electrical magnetic vortex and disappears.
Wahlberg attempts a rescue, then he himself becomes engulfed and
catapulted through time and space, ultimately crash landing on an unknown
planet.
The planet he crashes on -- as mentioned earlier -- is ruled by apes.
Apes disdain humans and use them as slaves, including the murderously
evil General Thade (played particularly well and with inhuman zeal by Tim
Roth). But at the other end of the spectrum are activist apes that
support “Human Rights,” such as Ari (Helena Bonham Carter). Ari treats
humans kindly and sees intelligence in humankind.
While the story line departs pretty widely from the original, there
are many similarities and parallels between the old series of movies --
of which five were made and which also spawned a TV series -- and this
new film. Knowledgeable fans of the original series will get the inside
jokes and see the links between the old and the new.
Unfortunately, those unfamiliar with the old films won’t get the jokes
and will be less entertained as a result. They won’t get the references
or new versions of lines from the original, and they probably won’t care
that Charleton Heston has a cameo role in this film, justifiably so as an
ape in this looking glass world (and film).
And that’s the real problem with this movie. On its own merit, the new
film offers a wonderfully visual world created, as usual, by Burton. It
carries over some of the original points from the first film, such as
that in some ways the apes are more civilized than humans. It also has
characteristically dramatic special effects and undeniably realistic
apes. But it doesn’t offer a better story or message than the original
film, with its reverse-racism story, which at the time made a political
statement with its thinly disguised and satirical look at race relations
in the U.S.
Finally, while Roth’s acting is truly exceptional and in my opinion
carries the film, unfortunately Wahlberg -- who is certainly no Heston --
can’t uphold his side of the bargain. He just wasn’t very strong or
engaging as a reluctant hero.
I’ll forgo my usual rating scale of Pay Full Price, Bargain Matinee,
Wait for Cable, Video Rental and See A Different Movie, in favor of a
banana rating scale, five being top banana and one being bottom. Rated
PG-13 for some scenes of violence, I give “Planet” a rating of three
bananas. And I suggest if you haven’t seen it, that you rent the original
before you go see the new version. It will make it a better moviegoing
experience for you.
* RICHARD BRUNETTE, 36, is a recreation supervisor for the city of
Costa Mesa and a Costa Mesa resident.
‘America’s Sweethearts’ not very sweet
Looking at movie trailers and reading blurbs of “America’s
Sweethearts,” and seeing names such as Catherine Zeta-Jones and John
Cusack, and then adding to those Julia Roberts and Billy Crystal, it
would seem a near certainty of a fun evening’s entertainment.
But, alas, the film’s writers equipped them with a flawed script that
gave them nothing sustaining to reward our trust. As two sisters,
Zeta-Jones and Julia Roberts have the “ugly” sister and “pretty” sister
syndrome. That’s farfetched in itself. Jones is the pretty one, Roberts
is the slave-type “gopher” at her sister’s beck and call.
Cusack and Jones have been America’s sweethearts, but a pending
contentious divorce threatens to leave a lot of people out of work, and
Billy Crystal rides to the rescue as an agent/promoter of an unreleased
movie based on the reconciliation of the “sweethearts.”
The movie bogs down repeatedly and you are hard pressed to care much
one way or the other whether they get back together and all can be
happily reunited. A terrible waste of talented actors and money from the
viewing public’s pocket.
* ELAINE ENGLAND, 65, lives in Newport Beach and owns a gift-basket
business she operates out of her home.
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