Planet of the Apes (2001)

Rated: ![]()
Starring: Mark Wahlberg, Helena Bonham Carter.
Director: Tim Burton
Edition Details:
Region 1 encoding (US and Canada only)
Color, Closed-captioned, DTS Surround Sound, Widescreen, Dolby
Commentary by director Tim Burton
Commentary by composer Danny Elfman with isolated score/sound effects
Theatrical trailer(s)
Disc 1:
Enhanced viewing mode offers picture-in-picture vignettes on various
filmmaking topics, plus access to additional materials such as visual effects
analysis
Disc 2:
Exclusive Programs
6 documentaries: Simian Academy, Face Like a Monkey, Ape Couture, Chimp
Symphony Op. 37, On Location: Lake Powell, Swinging from the Trees, Screen
Tests (4 quadrangle / 4-way audio split: makeup, group, costume, stunt,
movement)
5 extended scenes: Launch the Monkey, Dinner, Kill Them All, Ari in the
Trees, She's a Chimpanzee
Interactive multi-angle sequences: Limbo's Quadrangle, Sandar's Hours, Escape
from Ape City, In the Forest
HBO making-of special
Paul Oakenfold: "Rule the Planet Remix"
Trailers & TV spots
Posters & press kit
Still gallery of scenes and props
DVD-ROM features
Widescreen anamorphic format
Number of discs: 2
Editorial
Reviews
Billed as a
"reimagining" of the original 1968 film, Tim Burton's extraordinary Planet
of the Apes constantly borders on greatness, adhering to the spirit of
Pierre Boulle's original novel while exploring fresh and inventive ideas and
paying honorable tribute to the '68 sci-fi classic. Burton's gifts for
eccentric inspiration and visual ingenuity make this a movie that's as
entertaining as it is provocative, beginning with Rick Baker's best-ever ape
makeup (hand that man an Oscarฎ!), and continuing through the surprisingly
nuanced performances and breathtaking production design. Add to all this an
intelligent screenplay that turns Boulle's speculative reversal--the dominance
of apes over humans--into a provocative study of civil rights and civil war.
The film finally goes too far with a woefully misguided ending that pays weak
homage to the original, but everything preceding that misfire is astonishingly
right.
While attempting the space-pod retrieval of
a chimpanzee test pilot, Major Leo Davidson (Mark Wahlberg) enters a magnetic
storm that propels him into the distant future, where he crash-lands on the
ape-ruled planet. Among the primitively civilized apes, treatment of enslaved
humans is a divisive issue: senator's daughter Ari (Helena Bonham Carter) advocates
equality while the ruthless General Thade (Tim Roth) promotes extermination.
While Davidson ignites a human rebellion, this conflict is explored with
admirable depth and emotion, and sharp dialogue allows Burton's exceptional
cast to bring remarkable expressiveness to their embattled ape characters, most
notably in the comic relief of orangutan slave trader Limbo (played to
perfection by Paul Giamatti). Classic lines from the original film are cleverly
reversed (including an unbilled cameo for Charlton Heston, in ape regalia as
Thade's dying father), and while this tale of interspecies warfare leads to an
ironic conclusion that's not altogether satisfying, it still bears the ripe
fruit of a timeless what-if idea. --Jeff Shannon --