Something Simian, Something Sinister
By John Anderson
From Newsday (New York, NY), 07.27.2001
(2 STARS) PLANET OF THE APES. (PG-13) U.S. Air Force pilot, sucked up by a celestial
wormhole, is spit out on a planet ruled by fascist primates. Tim Roth dominates
as the big bad ape, the set design is inspired, but you might say the human element
is lacking. And that ending? Possibly written by a chimp. With Mark Wahlberg,
Helena Bonham Carter, Michael Clarke Duncan, Paul Giamatti, Estella Warren, Charlton
Heston. Screenplay by William Broyles Jr., Lawrence Konner, Mark Rosenthal, based
on the novel "Monkey Planet" by Pierre Boulle. Directed by Tim Burton.
1:40 (violence). At area theaters.
SLINKING, SNARLING AND sniffing his enemies with murderous intent, Tim Roth's
uber-primate General Thade gives the new and not quite improved "Planet
of
the Apes" nearly the juice it needs to save itself, if not the entire movie
summer. But in trying to reverse the plotline of the original five films, director
Tim Burton has also reversed their attitude, too: Instead of clumsily executed,
overly serious sci-fi, we now get something glitteringly facile, and cripplingly
glib.
Flipping the apes-as-slaves motif of "Conquest of" and "Battle
for the Planet of the Apes," Burton's film proposes an ape-run planet in
which humans are not just enslaved but, in Thade's view, dangerous enough to
warrant total extinction. Into this totalitarian nightmare rockets Air Force
pilot Leo Davidson (Mark Wahlberg), refugee from the space station Oberon, who
valiantly follows one of his ship's worker chimps through an electro-magnetic
time warp and finds himself hip-deep in monkeys and metaphor.
Burton's film, marked by the visual grandeur that has always been his calling
card, is saddled with a script by William Broyles Jr., Lawrence Konner and Mark
Rosenthal that goes for the gag every time it can - often feebly, sometimes desperately.
This is done largely, but not always, by quoting liberally from the celebrated
1968 ancestor of the entire cult, the film in which Charlton Heston - who appears
here to deliver an ironic, albeit self-serving anti-gun message - found his destiny
in the Forbidden Zone.
Sometimes it works. Sometimes it doesn't. "Damn them all to Hell!!!" Heston
bellows, as Thade's ailing ape father, who knows the legacy of humankind. "Take
your stinking hands off me, you damned dirty human!!" a soldier ape tells
a beaten Leo, the latter struggling to his feet. "Can't we all just get
along?" asks the sniveling Limbo (Paul Giamatti), the comical slave trader
whose Rodney King line resurrects, with little apparent thought, the race-relations
subtext of the old "Apes" series.
Roth aside, the cast is a handicap: Wahlberg can't carry a movie like this; the
ubiquitous Estella Warren, playing a human, is singularly unconvincing. But what
makes Burton's ape world more compelling than the original is that the gap between
primate and man is so much smaller than it was back when Heston crash-landed.
His character, Taylor, found an ape civilization advanced to about the point
of the early Renaissance; had Galileo been an advocate of human rights - humans
being mute and mangy - he would have been excommunicated by the movie's fundamentalist
orangutans/guardians of primate culture.
In the new film, the apes are pre-Hastings, post-Athens, a little to the right
of the Caesars' Rome. Apt, given the movie Burton is really remaking.
It may simply be that Stanley Kubrick's presence is as palpable this summer as
it has been in 20 years, but Burton's "Apes" isn't just a classic western
(Leo drops in, fights evil, rides on). It's also "Spartacus." Thade,
like Laurence Olivier's Crassus, uses the slave revolt instigated by Leo to consolidate
political power. Leo, reluctant hero, is able to organize the human swarm into
a fighting force willing to confront the overwhelming power of
the empire's "legions" and die for freedom. Ari (Helena Bonham Carter),
child of a senator and with a pretty obvious cross-species attraction for Leo,
sides with the enemies of her race (see Jean Simmons). There are scenes in obvious
homage to Kubrick's gladiator movie, but to explain them further would give away
the ending upon which the enjoyment of this "Apes" no
doubt depends.
And yes, there is a "surprise ending." The guess is here that knowing
laughs will anticipate that final befuddling shot, with irritation to follow:
While most of this "Planet of the Apes" is built on a fairly solid,
inventive narrative structure, the twist Burton leaves us with is just a joke
- something in keeping with the rest of his film, but somewhat unworthy of the
decades-long devotion on which he and Fox are hoping to cash in.