32 out of 44 people found the following comment useful :- Marky Mark's Planet Of The Apes, 2 September 2003
Author:
dunmore_ego from Los Angeles, California
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
Warning: Spoilers Galore!
Tim Burton remaking this sui generis movie is about as sensible as
remaking
Psycho - oh, that's right, some idiot already did that - I rest my
case.
Movie opens with chimpnaut blundering a simulation, proving he's not that
smart from the outset. Marky Mark appears in shot without his
characteristic
underpants showing, then is turned down by a plain woman who prefers the
touch of chimpanzees.
The perfunctory establishing shot of the space station orbiting Saturn
for
no apparent reason, interior of ship a-bustle with genetic experiments on
apes. Must we travel 1,300 million kilometers to Saturn to conduct these
experiments? The special effects team decrees it.
Marky's chimp gets lost in that staple of 60s sci-fi cinema - the Time
Warp.
Marky then demonstrates the space station's mind-boggling security
ineptness
by stealing a pod without anyone noticing, while simultaneously
demonstrating his abject stupidity in mounting a deep-space rescue
mission
into a worm-hole for an expendable test chimp, with a million dollar
vehicle
with limited fuel and oxygen supplies.
Before anyone can say `Pointless Remake' Marky has surfed the worm-hole,
crashed on an alien planet, removed his helmet without any thought to the
lethality of the atmosphere and is being chased through a sound stage
that
almost resembles a lush rainforest, if it weren't for the kliegs
backlighting the plastic trees.
Surprise! It's APES doing the chasing - or at least, it *would* have been
a
surprise if no one saw Planet Of The Apes THIRTY-THREE YEARS AGO.
Since Marky Mark did not get to show his pecs, take down his pants, or
bust
his lame whiteboy rap, he was characterless. Michael Clarke Duncan's
gorilla
teeth being inserted crookedly helped immensely in establishing *his*
lack
of character. Helena Bonham-Carter (aka irritating chimp activist), at a
loss without a Shakespearean script, did a fine job of outdoing both
Marky
and Clarke as Most Cardboard Cutout. Paul Giamatti, the orangutan slave
trader, secured the role of token comic relief and interspecies klutz.
Though I have grown bilious in hearing puns relating to this movie, one
review headline captured the essence of this Planet Of The Apes
`re-imagining': `The Apes Of Roth'. While everyone else minced about
looking
like extras from One Million Years BC or Greystoke, Tim Roth, as
Chimpanzee
Thade, chews massive amounts of scenery and hurls kaka splendiferously.
As
entertaining as his portrayal of the psychotic Thade was, his character
lacked a behavioral arc: Thade is mad when we first meet him... and he's
pretty much at the same level of mad at film's end. Nice
twist.
The original POTA (1968) featured a leading character, Charlton Heston's
Taylor, who was so disenchanted with mankind that he left earth for space
with no regrets - yet as that film progressed, Taylor unwittingly found
himself locked in a battle to prove mankind's worth - as their sole
champion! The original film was ultimately a tale of humiliation, not
salvation: when Taylor discovers the Statue of Liberty, he is forced to
realize that his species had NOT prevailed. Is there anything that
cerebral
or ironic to Marky Mark's Leo? Or Roth's Thade? No, but there's lots of
running.
The slogans cry: Take Back The Planet .but it's the APES' planet. In this
movie, humans and apes crash-landed here together, the humans having
degenerated to cavepeople, allowing the apes to acquire speech and
sensual
body armor; the apes DESERVED to inherit the planet! Along comes Marky
Mark,
in true anthropocentric arrogance, taking it for granted that humans HAVE
to
be the apex predators, simply because they're there. `Taking it back' is
as
ludicrous as apes landing here in 2001, complaining, `A planet where men
evolved from APES??!!' and then causing trouble with their overacting and
hairy anuses.
Heston was cast in the 1968 POTA because he had established his
reputation
as a maverick: he WAS Ben-Hur, Michelangelo, Moses! To cast him as the
mute,
dogged animal in an alien society was to stupefy an audience's
expectations:
how crazed must a world be where Our Man Charlton cannot command respect?
Marky Mark has currently only established that he has tight
underpants.
Though Heston was denigrated constantly by the ape council, he dominated
the
screen with his charisma and stupendous overacting. When Marky Mark tries
to
instill fervor in the mongoloid humans, it's like that unpopular guy in
school suddenly being made classroom monitor, who tells you to stop
drawing
penises on the blackboard and you throw a shoe at him. Burton tries to
elevate Marky to humanity's icon, but he comes off as a chittering
deviant.
In the original film, the apes deem Taylor a deviant, yet he was, to
audience and apes alike, an icon of humanity. That irony again.
It was apt that a man who elevated scene-chewing to an acting technique -
Heston - should play the father of this film's primo scene-chewer,
Thaddeus
Roth. As Roth's ape-dad, Charlton utters his own immortal lines, turned
against the HUMANS this time, `Damn them! Damn them all to
hell!'
The movie gets dumb and dumber towards the end. While Thaddeus is giving
Marky an ass-beating lesson, a pod descends from on high with Marky's
chimpnaut in it. Apes demonstrate their hebetude by bowing in obeisance
to
this incognizant creature, while Marky proves his own hebetude by
muttering,
`Let's teach these monkeys about evolution.' Firstly, they're not
monkeys,
you ape! Secondly, it was genetic tampering and imbecilic plot
fabrications
which brought the apes to this point, not evolution. And what you intend
to
teach them by blowing them away with the concealed lasergun is called
misanthropy, not evolution.
Giving away the twist ending would only confuse viewers into believing
that
Estella Warren's half-nekkid role was actually integral to the plot (be
still my pants.).
No matter that he was humankind's last underpanted hope; in the end, cop
apes take Marky away to Plot Point Prison where he was last heard
ululating,
`It's a madhouse! A MADHOUSE!!...'
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32 out of 44 people found the following comment useful :-

Marky Mark's Planet Of The Apes, 2 September 2003
Author: dunmore_ego from Los Angeles, California
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
Warning: Spoilers Galore!
Tim Burton remaking this sui generis movie is about as sensible as remaking Psycho - oh, that's right, some idiot already did that - I rest my case.
Movie opens with chimpnaut blundering a simulation, proving he's not that smart from the outset. Marky Mark appears in shot without his characteristic underpants showing, then is turned down by a plain woman who prefers the touch of chimpanzees.
The perfunctory establishing shot of the space station orbiting Saturn for no apparent reason, interior of ship a-bustle with genetic experiments on apes. Must we travel 1,300 million kilometers to Saturn to conduct these experiments? The special effects team decrees it.
Marky's chimp gets lost in that staple of 60s sci-fi cinema - the Time Warp. Marky then demonstrates the space station's mind-boggling security ineptness by stealing a pod without anyone noticing, while simultaneously demonstrating his abject stupidity in mounting a deep-space rescue mission into a worm-hole for an expendable test chimp, with a million dollar vehicle with limited fuel and oxygen supplies.
Before anyone can say `Pointless Remake' Marky has surfed the worm-hole, crashed on an alien planet, removed his helmet without any thought to the lethality of the atmosphere and is being chased through a sound stage that almost resembles a lush rainforest, if it weren't for the kliegs backlighting the plastic trees.
Surprise! It's APES doing the chasing - or at least, it *would* have been a surprise if no one saw Planet Of The Apes THIRTY-THREE YEARS AGO.
Since Marky Mark did not get to show his pecs, take down his pants, or bust his lame whiteboy rap, he was characterless. Michael Clarke Duncan's gorilla teeth being inserted crookedly helped immensely in establishing *his* lack of character. Helena Bonham-Carter (aka irritating chimp activist), at a loss without a Shakespearean script, did a fine job of outdoing both Marky and Clarke as Most Cardboard Cutout. Paul Giamatti, the orangutan slave trader, secured the role of token comic relief and interspecies klutz. Though I have grown bilious in hearing puns relating to this movie, one review headline captured the essence of this Planet Of The Apes `re-imagining': `The Apes Of Roth'. While everyone else minced about looking like extras from One Million Years BC or Greystoke, Tim Roth, as Chimpanzee Thade, chews massive amounts of scenery and hurls kaka splendiferously. As entertaining as his portrayal of the psychotic Thade was, his character lacked a behavioral arc: Thade is mad when we first meet him... and he's pretty much at the same level of mad at film's end. Nice twist.
The original POTA (1968) featured a leading character, Charlton Heston's Taylor, who was so disenchanted with mankind that he left earth for space with no regrets - yet as that film progressed, Taylor unwittingly found himself locked in a battle to prove mankind's worth - as their sole champion! The original film was ultimately a tale of humiliation, not salvation: when Taylor discovers the Statue of Liberty, he is forced to realize that his species had NOT prevailed. Is there anything that cerebral or ironic to Marky Mark's Leo? Or Roth's Thade? No, but there's lots of running.
The slogans cry: Take Back The Planet .but it's the APES' planet. In this movie, humans and apes crash-landed here together, the humans having degenerated to cavepeople, allowing the apes to acquire speech and sensual body armor; the apes DESERVED to inherit the planet! Along comes Marky Mark, in true anthropocentric arrogance, taking it for granted that humans HAVE to be the apex predators, simply because they're there. `Taking it back' is as ludicrous as apes landing here in 2001, complaining, `A planet where men evolved from APES??!!' and then causing trouble with their overacting and hairy anuses.
Heston was cast in the 1968 POTA because he had established his reputation as a maverick: he WAS Ben-Hur, Michelangelo, Moses! To cast him as the mute, dogged animal in an alien society was to stupefy an audience's expectations: how crazed must a world be where Our Man Charlton cannot command respect? Marky Mark has currently only established that he has tight underpants.
Though Heston was denigrated constantly by the ape council, he dominated the screen with his charisma and stupendous overacting. When Marky Mark tries to instill fervor in the mongoloid humans, it's like that unpopular guy in school suddenly being made classroom monitor, who tells you to stop drawing penises on the blackboard and you throw a shoe at him. Burton tries to elevate Marky to humanity's icon, but he comes off as a chittering deviant. In the original film, the apes deem Taylor a deviant, yet he was, to audience and apes alike, an icon of humanity. That irony again.
It was apt that a man who elevated scene-chewing to an acting technique - Heston - should play the father of this film's primo scene-chewer, Thaddeus Roth. As Roth's ape-dad, Charlton utters his own immortal lines, turned against the HUMANS this time, `Damn them! Damn them all to hell!'
The movie gets dumb and dumber towards the end. While Thaddeus is giving Marky an ass-beating lesson, a pod descends from on high with Marky's chimpnaut in it. Apes demonstrate their hebetude by bowing in obeisance to this incognizant creature, while Marky proves his own hebetude by muttering, `Let's teach these monkeys about evolution.' Firstly, they're not monkeys, you ape! Secondly, it was genetic tampering and imbecilic plot fabrications which brought the apes to this point, not evolution. And what you intend to teach them by blowing them away with the concealed lasergun is called misanthropy, not evolution.
Giving away the twist ending would only confuse viewers into believing that Estella Warren's half-nekkid role was actually integral to the plot (be still my pants.).
No matter that he was humankind's last underpanted hope; in the end, cop apes take Marky away to Plot Point Prison where he was last heard ululating, `It's a madhouse! A MADHOUSE!!...'
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