Damon Smith says it will be hard to ape this 'Planet' film for special effects
Blending state-of-the-art special effects with an intelligent script, Dawn Of The Planet Of The Apes conjures two hours of animal magic that looks set to be crowned king of the blockbuster swingers.
Tim Burton’s abortive Planet Of The Apes is now a distant memory thanks to the 2011 revamp Rise Of The Planet Of The Apes and this superior sequel, which pushes the art of motion-capture performance to new limits.
Andy Serkis’ exemplary work as Caesar, the super-intelligent chimpanzee who leads the ape uprising, is the film’s emotional heartbeat.
His ability to convey the character’s rage, despair and passion through movement and subtle gesture is breathtaking.
Toby Kebbell is also compelling as Caesar’s war-mongering rival, who believes the key to his species’ survival is the extermination of humans.
Mark Bomback, Rick Jaffa and Amanda Silver’s script elegantly draws parallels between the feuding primates, juxtaposing tender scenes of parenting with bruising skirmishes that create divisions both sides.
Ten winters have passed since simian flu ravaged the globe. In the absence of law and order, basic resources such as water, food and electricity are dangerously depleted.
Dreyfus (Gary Oldman), who lost his entire family to the virus, leads survivors of the ALZ-113 virus in San Francisco.
He despatches a team led by family man Malcolm (Clarke) to access the O’Shaughnessy Dam, which provides the city with electricity.
In the forest that envelops the dam, the scouting party encounters apes led by Caesar, including his ambitious second-in-command Koba (Kebbell), impetuous son Blue Eyes (Thurston) and Bornean orangutan Maurice (Konoval). Malcolm’s trigger-happy compatriot Carver (Acevedo) shoots one of the apes and the humans are banished to their stronghold.
Once Dreyfus learns about the neighbouring ape community, he asks Malcolm and co to refrain from telling the other survivors.
“They’re talking apes with big-ass spears!” shrieks Carver.
Malcolm realises that he must earn Caesar’s trust to gain access to the dam so he prepares to return to the forest with wife Ellie (Russell) and teenage son Alexander (Smith-McPhee).
“If you’re not back in three days, we’re going to go out there and kill every last one of them,” warns the one-time military man Dreyfus.
Dawn Of The Planet Of The Apes is a slick thrill ride with brains as well as brawn.
The grim mood, which permeates the first half, leads to all-guns-blazing war and director Reeves orchestrates these brutal sequences with elan.
Digital effects are jaw-dropping, giving birth to a realistic army of blood-thirsty apes who cram every chaotic, blood-spattered frame.
The film’s strong anti-gun message comes through loud and clear, but the appetite for destruction overpowers diplomacy.
“I always think ape better than humans,” laments Caesar as his dream of lasting peace founders.
“I see now how like them we are.”
Dawn Of The Planet Of The Apes (12A)
130 minutes
Directed by Matt Reeves
Starring Andy Serkis, Jason Clarke, Keri Russell, Kodi Smit-McPhee, Toby Kebbell, Gary Oldman, Nick Thurston, Kirk Acevedo, Jon Eyez, Enrique Murciano
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