DAWN OF THE PLANET OF THE APES takes place 10
years after
RISE OF THE PLANET OF THE APES where humankind has been decimated by the simian
flu. Caesar and his fellow apes have
built a home for themselves and they haven’t seen a human for two years and
they wonder if the humans have killed each other off until they encounter a
group of humans searching for the hydroelectric dam that they want to use to
bring power back to San Francisco. It starts a conflict between humans
and apes
that Caesar and a human called Malcolm (Jason Clarke) want to avoid, but others
like Koba (an ape) want to ignite war.
The leader of the human settlement, Dreyfus (played by Gary Oldman who
hams it up), wants the power to contact other humans and he is willing to
destroy the apes to get the power back on, but he allows a mission into ape
territory to get the power back on.
Meanwhile, Koba (the really goddamn ugly dirty ape) scouts the human
settlement and sees the human stockpile of weapons as a means to an end in his
own bid for power thinking Caesar is too soft for the humans.
DAWN OF THE PLANET OF THE APES is a solid follow
up film as
you see the story from both sides as each side has their reason to hope and to
fear. In history, we have sought out
peace only to have the fear of others tear down that sought after peace. They
want to protect their families while
Koba thinks only for himself based on fear (and later a need for power). You
see an ape culture and ape life seen through
this sequel in addition to wisely holding back the moments when the apes talk
in English where they save a lot of the ape communications for sign language or
by moment and expression. You have the
conflict between Caesar and his son which has a nice arc throughout the film
while you see the human wanting a good future for his son (so he doesn’t have
to see the things that he witnessed during the fall of civilization due to the
simian flu pandemic). Sometimes the movie takes a backdoor to the humans and
really focuses on the apes. Malcolm and
his second wife Elle (Keri Russell) and Malcolm’s teenage son wander through
the movie as they react to their situation and the apes most of the time
because Andy Serkis is the real star here in his motion capture performance of
Caesar. Matt Reeves delivers another
great directorial job where the apes are better developed than the humans as
some of the humans become pretty much generic stock clichés. However, I do think
this movie deserves a
second viewing to examine the human and ape characters more.
I wonder where they will take the next sequel
(which is
tentatively set for July 29, 2016)
and whether it is going to be titled PLANET OF THE APES or WAR FOR THE PLANET
OF THE APES or CONQUEST OF THE PLANET OF THE APES or even BATTLE FOR BATTLE OF
THE APES. Once war begins, neither side
probably won’t easily forgive and humans are also guided by their fear of apes
due to the simian flu created from the drug testing on apes in the first
film. I also wonder if they will or
when they will tie into the nice nod to the original PLANET OF THE APES in a
moment mentioned in the end credits for RISE OF THE PLANET OF THE APES.
SPECIAL FEATURES:
Deleted scenes (with optional audio commentary
by Matt
Reeves) which are great scenes that the director loved and yet cut for pacing
reasons
Featurettes:
JOURNEY TO DAWN- talk about the themes explored
in the
sequel and Planet of the Apes movie sin general
ANDY SERKIS: REDISCOVERING CAESAR- how Andy approached
the
character in the sequel and cast and the director talking about the performance
of Andy Serkis
HUMAN AND APES: THE CAST
OF DAWN- interviews with the cast and director of the sequel about the
characters in the movie
THE WORLD OF DAWN- a look at the world they created
for the
sequel an dthe challenges they met
THE APE COMMUNITY- a look at ape society, the
ape weapon
props, and ape language (ape sign language and the use/ tone of human words
when speaking)
MOVE LIKE AN APE: AN
ARTIST’S MEDIUM- goes behind the training that the actors and stunt people went
through to get the stillness and movement of the apes in the movie
WETA AND DAWN- a look at
the various design challenges for creating the digital apes for the sequel and
digital set extensions
THE FIGHT FOR A NEW DAWN-
behind-the-scenes look at creating the climatic fight on the motion capture
stage and through the computer along with a look at the music score
Feature Film audio commentary by director Matt
Reeves
Three theatrical trailers
Sneak Peek at EXODUS: GODS AND
KINGS (two minute look at the locations and costumes that help create the look
of the movie featuring interviews with Ridley Scott and the crew all in two
minutes) and theatrical trailer for EXODUS: GODS AND
KINGS
Movie in High Definition 3D (on separate blu-ray
disc)
Digital HD copy to instantly stream and download
for TV,
Computer, Tablet, and Smartphone
FINAL ANALYSIS: DAWN OF THE PLANET OF THE APES
is a great
sequel worth watching more than once and the best featurettes focus on the
motion capture performance of the actors playing the apes.
This review is ©12-10-2014
David Blackwell and cannot be reprinted without permission. Send all comments
to feedback@enterline-media.com
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