It was sooo unrealistic, even allowing for the silliness of the premise. So I'm supposed to believe that at a laboratory in which they test gene therapies on chimpanzees, a laboratory that ostensibly employs experts on chimp physiology, nobody noticed that one of the new arrivals was pregnant? Sorry, no. I'm supposed to believe that a phalanx of riot police, with their rifles at the ready, has to be reminded by their superior to take the safeties off? Nope. I'm supposed to believe that an animal trainer who is beaten for a considerable period of time by a several mature chimpanzees is going to be in any condition to explain what happened the next morning? Again, no. He'd have been lucky to have survived that attack at all; at a minimum, his injuries would have been traumatic. But that brings us to the next problem.
I wanted it to be sort of gory and scary, but the violence never rose beyond the level of the cartoonish. This was a movie that just couldn't deal maturely with the violence at its core. There were several instances in this movie in which the victim of chimp-violence ought to have been, by all rights, a bloody mess. (If a chimp starts wailing on you like that, you ought to thank your lucky stars if your most notable injury derives from a bite to your finger). At least in part, the movie's squeamishness about treating this violence seriously has to be related to its depiction of the apes as unambiguous white-hats. If you start showing what really happens when people get attacked by chimpanzees, the audience might lose its warm, fuzzy feelings for our heroes. Me though, I like an ambiguous hero. I come to the cinema in hopes of experiencing complicated emotions. I prefer to be confronted by the ramifications of the real excesses of the side I'm rooting for. Rise of the Planet of the Apes lacks the moral backbone to even confront its own premise.
Another contributing factor to the film's squeamishness must have been its PG-13 rating. I need to learn not to go see PG-13 films, no matter how interesting they look like they might be. Rarely, something like Super 8 comes along, but most of the time, you just get action movies that privilege visual effects over versimilitude and emotional resonance.
Also related to my complaint of cartoonishess, Katy notes that in the course of the film, although we see many chimpanzees from many angles, standing, sitting, running, whatever, we never see any ape genitals. This, if you've ever seen a chimpanzee, is a LARGE omission. See right. This isn't really a complaint. But once you notice what the movie is NOT showing you, you kind of have to laugh about it.
The characters, the writing, and (maybe) the acting were all terrible. Rise of the Planet of the Apes is inhabited by the dullest, flattest characters that I've seen in a movie in a long time. Let's play a game where we try to sum up all of the main human characters in one word each. This is like shooting fish in a barrel:
- Will: self-absorbed
- Will's girlfriend: pretty
- Will's dad: old
- Will's boss: bastard
- Will's neighbor: jerk
- Lab chimp expert: bearded
- Chimp shelter owner: amoral
- Chimp shelter handler no. 1: sadist
- Chimp shelter handler no. 2: stutters
In light of all this, it's almost irritating how good a job the director and Andy Serkis do in bringing the character of Caesar to life in mostly wordless scenes. Caesar is a compelling character. If this was the best script they could come up with, they should have striven harder for wordlessness.
Ryan and I had a fairly long discussion about this movie and I guess now I've decided to share it, too, since Stirling asked. :) (And to organize my thoughts, I'll follow Ryan's format)
ReplyDeleteIt was unrealistic. I mean, no one wants to be the guy, when shit's exploding all over the place in Star Wars (or to use a more recent example: Transformers on the Moon) saying, "Explosions in space don't look like that." Everyone wants to strangle that guy. That said, the reason no one likes that guy is because of the "rule of cool": If something looks/sounds/is cool enough, the fact that it is also impossible will be overridden. No one will care. The problem, for me, with this movie was that the rule of cool didn't work. I never found anything in the movie cool enough for me to overlook the glaring impossibilities or the complete idiocy of, let's face it, every character in the film who wasn't an ape. Even the moments where I should have been cheering, I wasn't.
The gory and scary stuff (or lack thereof) hits me in the same way as the stuff I said before. I don't particularly like seeing horror movies or slasher movies. I don't necessarily LIKE being terrified. However, I want my movie to have some...bite, for lack of a better word. I want to feel like consequences to our actions. If everyone just gets the shit beat out of them by a chimp but lives to tell the tale the next day, why am I invested? I guess I'm supposed to be invested because everyone's going to die of the plague, but that storyline left me cold, as well. I just felt like the cartoonish and lack of the results of violence in the movie really undermined for me the whole point of the story which was: be careful what you do, even with the best of intentions, because you could end up poisoning all of humanity and setting up a race of Smart!Apes! as our successors to the planet.
And yes, I was the one who brought up the Ape!Testicles. No, I was not looking forward to seeing ape testicles all afternoon, but once you don't see them, you can't forget you haven't seen them, does that make sense? ;) If there weren't so many other glaring problems with this movie, I probably would have never even noticed (or the rule of cool would have set in and I wouldn't have cared).
The writing was terrible. The lines were terrible. The only time I felt a twinge of sympathy or even understanding of what the hell was motivating these characters was when Caesar was left alone in the primate center and Will told him he couldn't take him home and Caesar rubbed the window off of the wall (oh, and when he drew the window in the first place).
I'll give this movie some credit. I actually was a little afraid when Caesar was getting so angry when the neighbor was yelling at John Lithgow. I was actually nervous that something terrible was going to happen. And then all he did was bite the guy's finger (off? Did he just nibble on it? Was it a luuuuuv bite?) and all we saw was a tiny smudge of blood on his lip and a bunch of people inching away and I felt...I don't know. Like nothing had really happened.
One thing I do have to mention: Draco Malfoy, Ape Wrangler. I actually liked him. Well, not the character. But I was glad to see him come on screen. I was glad he got his comeuppance, too. It was shocking (pun intended) and deserved and (for once) deservedly unpleasant. (My one hope for that actor is that he isn't constantly typecast in the "Wait until my FATHER hears about THIS" role.
I went into this movie prepared to dislike it and that's how I came out of it. I don't know if I had gone in with a different attitude if I could have enjoyed it. I found it slow and annoying in a lot of ways. Ryan has already said pretty much everything I wanted to, so I think I'll leave it at that.
Mostly, it was just disappointing. Maybe I'm just getting too old for summer movies. :)
Also: Rule of Cool: http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/RuleOfCool