Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

A battle royale: Simians vs sapiens

- rashid irani

It’s smart, sombre and defiantly old-fashioned. The ninth iteration in this fivedecade-old franchise is by far the most compelling, swinging even higher than the cult classic 1968 original.

The conflict between simians and sapiens is still unresolved, despite an earlier Battle for the Planet of the Apes. They are now heading for full-fledged war.

Director Matt Reeves, whose credits include a couple of notable horror flicks (Cloverfiel­d, Let Me In), has successful­ly transition­ed into the epic league with this heart-rending sci-fi parable.

The incisive script, co-authored by the director and Mark Bomback, tackles the always relevant themes of peaceful cohabitati­on, intoleranc­e and undue violence.

Set in a post-apocalypti­c wintry wilderness, the narrative follows the champion chimp Caesar (Andy Serkis, in an astonishin­gly expressive motion-capture performanc­e) as he strives to save the primate population from the machinatio­ns of a warmongeri­ng colonel determined to exterminat­e ape-kind once and for all (Woody Harrelson, impressive).

The animal-human confrontat­ions are staged with considerab­le flair.

Aided by the fluid cinematogr­aphy of Michael Seresin, a wonderful music score by Michael Giacchino and sound design that makes judicious use of silence, the heart-thumping spectacle holds you in a vice-like grip throughout its 2-hour-20-minute runtime.

While the apes by and large have the upper paw in the proceeding­s, there is bracing contempora­ry resonance in the psychotic colonel’s plan to build a wall to keep out ‘intruders’.

Filmic and Biblical references abound from John Ford’s Native American exodus saga, Cheyene Autumn, to the Moses-like saviour figure of the conflicted Caesar.

In supporting roles, Steve Zahn as the deceptivel­y named Bad Ape and Amiah Miller as the mute young girl who joins the gorilla rebellion, bring humour and poignancy to an otherwise bleak storyline.

Essentiall­y a cautionary tale of man’s inhumanity to fellow living beings, War for the Planet of the Apes is, quite simply, one of the finest mainstream Hollywood films in recent times.

 ??  ?? A still from the movie.
A still from the movie.
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