Manawatu Standard

War a movie we can go ape about

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War for the Planet of the Apes (M, 140 mins) Directed by Matt Reeves

Third time really is the charm for Weta Digital.

Who knew that 15 years after the franchise seemingly went for a fatal [Tim] ‘‘Burton’’, we’d be hailing these Planet prequels/ reboots as one of the great cinematic sci-fi trilogies.

We’ve truly seen the rise of a compelling, complicate­d yet comprehens­ible story that has also heralded a new dawn in specialeff­ects wizardry and movie making, crowned by the breathtaki­ng, beguiling and bravura War.

For the past two years, Caesar (Andy Serkis) and his geneticall­yenhanced shrewdness of apes have been on the run, trying to evade capture by those humans not wiped out by Simian Flu.

Still paying for the rash actions of his once loyal lieutenant Koba, Caesar’s hopes of peace with his less hairy ‘‘distant relatives’’ now seem forlorn.

A leader who never wanted war, he finds himself drawn into it when bullets meant for him take away both his beloved eldest son and partner. As revenge blindsides him, he abandons his charges, hellbent on making the homosapien who hurt him pay.

Adding co-writing duties to his Dawn directing gig, Matt Reeves has conjured up a potent combinatio­n of heart-wrenching and harrowing Shakespear­ian drama and thrilling action.

Fans of the original series quintet have plenty of nods large and small to excite them, while Reeves and Mark Bomback also seemingly draw from a wide range of literary and cinematic inspiratio­ns.

Combining the premises and conceits of two earlier 2017 blockbuste­rs – Kong: Skull Island and Logan – War will also remind viewers of classic tales like The Searchers, Apocalypse Now, The Empire Strikes Back and Spartacus.

It’s also a tale that feels both timeless and timely, especially given the ‘‘nightmare’’ some Americans feel they’ve been experienci­ng since ‘‘that Tuesday’’ in November.

Read all the allegories and allusions you want into it though, at its heart War is innovative, intelligen­t and indelible cinema.

Michael Giacchino’s (Lost) score is haunting, the set-pieces thrilling, the spectacle jawdroppin­g and the performanc­es powerfully persuasive.

On the human side, you have Woody Harrelson evoking his Natural Born Killers persona, while up against him there’s a cadre of amazing motion-capture enhanced turns, led by the amazing Andy Serkis.

The Academy, The Hollywood Foreign Press et al need to find a way to honour this groundbrea­king piece of acting.

And surely Wellington’s Weta will be collecting plenty of silver and goldware come early 2018. For they have delivered the 2017 blockbuste­r we’ve all been waiting for.

Finally a film worth going ape about. – James Croot

 ??  ?? War of the Planet of the Apes is, at its heart, innovative, intelligen­t and indelible movie making.
War of the Planet of the Apes is, at its heart, innovative, intelligen­t and indelible movie making.

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