Pages
- Home
- Action Figure Review Index
- Who is Barbecue17?
- My Toy Review Rating Scale!
- 31 Days of Toy Terror!
- Top 10 Lists and Other Stuff
- Podcasts on The Epic Review
- Oh the Horror!: Horror Movie Reviews!
- The Batgirl Library
- The Dark Knight Gallery
- Fabulous Secret Powers
- Snake Mountain!
- Beast Manor
- The Harley Quinndex
- The Joker's Funhouse
- Tosche Station
- The Kessel Run
- LV-426
- Man-At-Armory
- The Crystal Castle
- Teela: Warrior Goddess
- Trap Jaw's Tourist Trap
- Cringer's Crib
- Sea of Rakash
- Evil-Lyn's Dungeon
- The Fright Zone
- The Wonderdome
- Spawn Alley
- The Royal Junkyard
- Fortress Vader
- The Fortress of Solitude
- Of Travel Bugs, Trackables, and Travellers
- The Trouble with Trollans!
Saturday, July 22, 2017
Hail Caesar! - A 'War for the Planet of the Apes' Review
It is a rare instance in Hollywood when a remake of a film or franchise surpasses the original, but that is exactly what happened Rupert Wyatt's Rise of the Planet of the Apes (2011) and Matt Reeve's Dawn of the Planet of the Apes (2014). Perhaps an even rarer occurrence in blockbuster filmmaking is when the end of a trilogy meets the expectations of two epic predecessors, from Return of the Jedi to Back to the Future Part III many iconic franchises and filmmakers have failed to complete a perfect story. Could Director Matt Reeve defy the typical Trilogy curse with War of the Planet of the Apes or better yet distinguish itself above its two previous near perfect predecessors? Find out in our War for the Planet of the Apes review after the break...
*Spoilers for War of the Planet of the Apes follow!
In War for the Planet of the Apes Matt Reeves brings this trilogy to an epic culmination that offers audiences a multifaceted film rarely seen in blockbuster film making fueled by the iconic performance of Andy Serkis as Caesar. Through emotionally filled facial expressions and resonating voice acting Serkis weaves the audience into his final journey as King of the Apes. The film's ability to tackle sensitive issues subtly, but powerfully once again allow this series to achieve quality that probably shouldn't be possible in a film revolving primarily around motion capture characters.
As the success and budget of this film series has progressed it has always managed to sustain its intimacy. This film truly does feel like a grandiose War film, but at the same time is successfully anchored by it's personal revenge journey of the franchises core apes: Caesar, Maurice, and Rocket. From the outset this franchise has remained grounded emotionally by always truly being a story about fathers and sons, something this film does better than previous entries into the series.
Reeves raises the stakes both personally and categorically by giving Caesar a human reflection of himself at his worst in Woody Harrelson's The Colonel. Harrelson's scenery chewing religious crusade to purify this post-apocalyptic World offers audiences one of the most memorable protagonist and antagonist dichotomies since Heath Ledger's Joker and Christian Bale's Batman in The Dark Knight (2008). A dichotomy that is fully realized in the chilling exposition ridden meeting between Caesar and The Colonel at the midpoint of the film, resulting in one of the single greatest scenes of 2017.
War for the Planet of the Apes has the unique ability to up the stakes while never losing sight of the franchise's core themes, in this case family and unity. The decisions made by Reeves both in the directing chair and in the writer's room provides both audiences and critics alike with substantive ramifications usually not associated with modern franchise entries or blockbuster filmmaking. These tough and far-reaching choices, combined with an Oscar worthy performance by Andy Serkis resulting in the greatest trilogy of modern cinema.
Confirmed: EPIC
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Agreed! On all points.
ReplyDelete