It's actually Friday night, y'all, so.... #wenchwatches #conquestOfThePlanetOfTheApes
This film proves to be rather different than previous Apes films we've watched lately. From my understanding, there's no time travel in this one at all.
Nor do we have any of the characters from the first or second films.
We *do* have Montalban, however, reprising his role as the circus leader Amado. Bless you, sir. This film needs the class.
We also have Milo, or as we will come to know him...Caesar.
The fantastic future of 1991.
Good news: The US has collapsed in this film.
Bad news: ...into several fascist police city states.
The movie is trying to explain things, and it barely feels natural with the exposition. After a "space-borne virus" makes dogs and cats extinct, we domesticated apes. First as pets, then as slaves.
This future sucks. We could have Doggirls and a catboys, but nnooooooo...
It is horrifyingly refreshing for the film to no longer pull any punches. The ape "training facility" is all to plausible awfulness. Physical violence, electric shocks, pharmaceuticals...
Caesar is sold off in an auction, a modern slave market.
It's no surprise highest ranking cops look like SS.
Well. No punches pulled indeed. The governor in this is a racist asshole, even moreso than Hasslein was in Escape. MacDonald (Hari Rhodes), the only black character so far, alludes to this historical slavery of the US.
The governor, played by Don Murry, brushes it off. Of course.
Welp, there goes Montalban. He turned himself into the police to hide "Milo". He's forced to sign a confession and deposition under a lie detector. Wanting to protect Milo, he hurls himself out a window to conceal the truth.
Meanwhile, "Milo" is assigned to the Governor's command post of all things, and is given the chance to name himself from a book. While the governor assumes our protagonist cannot read, we know better.
And there we finally get the name we later know him by: Caesar.
The death of Amadeo (Montalban), prompts Caesar to action, organizing acts of disobedience from the other Apes. In a nice bit of montage work. The acts are small at first, but allows Caesar to train other apes....in weaponry.
@socketwench - So the writer of the Second-Through-Fourth Movies (I think that's Paul Dehn) had an entire timeline in his head about how the Apes world came around to the first movie.
The story behind Conquest is amazing. But the execution really comes across as reading a Wikipedia Article about the Apes Rebellion. It feels very tell-don't-show...like the writer is explaining the plot to us in a board meeting versus writing a movie.