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Battle for the Planet of the Apes

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Battle for the Planet of the Apes
Directed by J. Lee Thompson
Written by Pierre Boulle (characters)
Paul Dehn and John Corrington & Joyce Hooper Corrington (screenplay)
Starring Roddy McDowall,
Claude Akins,
Natalie Trundy
John Huston
Paul Williams
Release date(s) Flag of the United States June 15, 1973
Running time 93 min.
Language English
Preceded by Conquest of the Planet of the Apes
All Movie Guide profile
IMDb profile

Battle for the Planet of the Apes is a 1973 science fiction film and is the fifth and final entry in the Planet of the Apes series. It was directed by J. Lee Thompson. Considered by critics to be the least favorable of all the sequels to the original, the film's budget was also the lowest.

Contents

Plot

Set in flashback to the turn of the 21st century, and told by the Great Lawgiver, this sequel focuses on the ape leader, Caesar (Roddy McDowall), years after he led the ape revolution in the previous film, Conquest of the Planet of the Apes. In this post-nuclear war society, Caesar tries to cultivate peace between his simian peers and the surviving remains of humanity. Gorilla leader Aldo (Claude Akins), however, wants nothing to do with this; therefore he plots Caesar's overthrow and doom. Caesar is now married to Lisa, the female ape of the previous film, and they have a son, named Cornelius in honor of Caesar's father. Caesar regrets having never known his parents, until his human assistant, McDonald, informs him that through audiotapes, he can hear his parents speak. Caesar learns the archives are in the Forbidden City, once Central City, and is now nuclear ruins. Caesar travels to the Forbidden City and sneaks in to find the record archives. However, there are others still living in the Forbidden City, many who were former slaveowners of the apes, now under the command of Governor Kolp. Caesar and his party learns of the future of the world as well as see his parents, but barely have enough time wherein to study the tapes before they must escape or risk capture and death. Kolp considers this clandestine entrance by Caesar an act of espionage while his underling Mendez says that they did nothing wrong and should be allowed to go in peace. Governor Kolp then declares war on Ape City, mustering the humans from the Forbidden City to destroy the ape society once and for all. Meanwhile, Aldo is furious over the fact that Caesar wants to co-exist peacefully with humans, and plots a military coup in order to get himself installed as the leader of Ape City. Cornelius, while climbing a tree, overhears this, but is spotted by Aldo, who hacks at the branch, causing Cornelius to suffer serious injuries and remain bedridden. Caesar is devastated by this news, and can only leave Cornelius' side when he learns Kolp is invading Ape City. Aldo breaks into the armory and steals its weapons and corrals all the humans into a pen, claiming that all humans are alike and should be locked away. Towards the end of the movie, the mutants lose in their effort to conquer Ape City (a reversed plot similar to the failure of the apes to conquer the Forbidden Zone in the second film). It is then revealed that Cornelius' injury was not due to an accident, but Aldo's malevolence. An infuriated Caesar engages in a single combat with Aldo, which results in Aldo's death. Caesar then frees the humans, who claim that they will stay in the corral, because freedom is meaningless without respect by the apes. Caesar then realizes the apes are just as despicable as the slaveowners who once owned them if they treat the humans as second class citizens. The apes and humans then decide to coexist with one another and begin to make a new society. Back in Forbidden City, Kolp's underling Mendez has succeeded him as Governor. A mutant is about to fire the cobalt bomb (that can be recognized as the "alpha omega bomb" worshipped in Beneath the Planet of the Apes) when Governor Mendez countermands Kolp's last order, saying that it will result in massive destruction and a Pyrrhic victory, whereas if they form a respect, even religion, based on the bomb, they will always have a sense of purpose in their lives. Then the elderly ape set forth at the beginning of the film, (the Great Lawgiver, played by John Huston), finishes the narration begun in the prologue which is over 600 years later to a group of young humans and apes. But this is still 1,400 years before the time-line set forth in the first film. It is left ambiguous as to whether the ape-dominated society as seen in the first film and the eventual destruction of Earth as seen in the second will actually come to pass. However, as this film takes place after a nuclear war has nearly wiped out civilization, at least one major element of the first film still occurs. One important difference between the histories is that the Lawgiver is teaching human children that are both healthy and intelligent, unlike the first two films wherein humans lacked the ability to speak. Screenwriter Paul Dehn stated that the final shot of a tear rolling from the eye of the statue of Caesar is a final comment to the audience that Caesar's vision of a joint ape/human society ultimately failed. Some think that tear was a way of saying that Caesar's vision did happen. But the viewer is left with the notion that human-ape relations only deteriorate during the next 1,400 years until the arrival of the astronauts in the first film.

Goofs

When the humans from the dead city and two of Aldo's gorillas meet in the desert, Governor Kolp watches the gorillas through his binoculars. He then issues orders to shoot the gorillas with a cannon. The cannon fires in a completely different direction to the way he was looking, but hits them anyway. When Kolp is coming into a city filled with seemingly dead bodies, one ape's foot twitches noticeably. Caesar's famous "Now, fight like apes!" line is marred by his ape lower-mouth appliance beginning to fall off, revealing his own human mouth inside. The director tried to hide this by blurring those frames of film at the lower end of the screen. What looks like dust on the camera was intentional. When Caesar, Macdonald and Virgil go to the destroyed city to look for Zira and Cornelius's recordings they see scenes recorded originally from Escape in which there was no camera present.

Extended Cut

The CBS television version adds a few scenes cut from the theatrical release. One scene takes place after Aldo chases teacher Abe, where MacDonald reminds him why humans should not say "no" to an ape. Another scene towards the end of the film shows the beginnings of the House of Mendez cult, as the humans in the city are about to fire off the doomsday bomb (as seen in Beneath the Planet of the Apes), but decide not to, as it would threaten the world. If checked carefully in "Beneath", one can see signs of Mendez being around the Forbidden Zone, as there is a hymnal on the pipe organ reading "Mendez II", busts of past leaders of the mutant society (such as Mendez XIV), and the leader of the mutant society in "Beneath" is also named Mendez (presumably a descendant of the Mendez in "Battle"). It is clear that Governor Mendez has taken a different tack of leadership from his predecessors, Kolp and Breck, in that he is more sympathetic to the apes living their own lives; so long as they do not invade the mutant territory, and starting up the religion of the bomb. It is also possible that he has now started a theocracy with the leader being called Mendez, and coming to power through hereditary succession. In 2006, the Planet of the Apes movies were re-released separately and in a new box set. When Battle for the Planet of the Apes was re-released on the box set and separately, it was advertised as a digitally-remastered, extended version with 10 minutes of additional footage. This version has been released before, via bootleg, and has been widely acknowledged by Apes fans as the definitive version. Here listed are the additional scenes:

  • Near the end of the opening credits, the score continues to its original ending for 25 seconds, with extra footage of General Aldo approaching on a horse.
  • The chase of the teacher of the apes is longer by 20 seconds.
  • The mutant chief is walking around in his HQ, and has more dialogue.
  • The entry into the ruins of Central City (now called the Forbidden City) of the ape scout party with Caesar is 40 seconds longer, with more dialogue.
  • The escape from the Forbidden City shows more footage and dialogue involving the apes.
  • The scene were Cornelius is "shot" by a human boy begins slightly earlier, making it clear that the shooting is a game — which makes more sense, since no mutant party had yet even approached the ape city.
  • DELETED SCENE: In this edited scene, Governor Kolp tells his lieutenant to fire an atomic missile on Ape City when he gives the signal.
  • The assault by the mutants is shown 45 seconds longer. (In this sequence there were three more smaller cuts that reduced the battle scene by 40 additional seconds, and originally there was no musical score.)
  • The scene where the Governor Kolp calls "Sergeant York" is missing.
  • Again, parts of the assault are cut by almost 40 seconds.
  • There are additional shots and dialogue before the mutants lay down the smoke screen.
  • 15 more seconds of the battle were cut.
  • 20 seconds of later battle footage cut.
  • The scene where Aldo kills Governor Kolp and his followers in the school bus was cut in the U.S. theatrical version, but has been restored.
  • The fight between Aldo and Caesar is longer.
  • DELETED SCENE: The new Governor Mendez talks the mutant lieutenant out of firing the atomic missile. As they argue, they discover it is the ALPHA-OMEGA bomb. This scene was cut. (Only with this sequence reinserted the odd cut from the Caesar conversation involving the humans to the ending sequence makes a little more sense and looks better.)

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Battle for the Planet of the Apes from Wíkipedia. ©2006 by Wíkipedia. Licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. View a list of authors or edit this article.

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