The Press

Wētā FX’s wizards at heart of franchise’s new entry

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Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes

(M, 145 mins)

Directed by Wes Ball

Reviewed by James Croot

**** ½

It has been billed as the beginning of a new trilogy – and by its own director as, “Apocalypto with apes”. Arguably it’s also a risky propositio­n, a return to a beloved now 56-yearold film franchise, seven years after the Oscar-nominated War signed off the last trilogy in truly spectacula­r fashion.

But while its vertiginou­s, immersive opening raises the spectre of both polarising Aliens’ prequel Prometheus and James Cameron’s Avatars (especially with its unexpected bird-monkey bonding premise), Kingdom eventually becomes a coming-of-age road-revenge movie that is not only a compelling self-contained adventure, but also whets the appetite for more monkey business down the track.

It returns to the alternativ­e post-ALZ-113 outbreak-affected Earth “many generation­s” after the death of Andy Serkis’ decent, moral and compassion­ate ape leader Caesar – and when simian language and culture have become both well establishe­d and tribal.

There isn’t much that Noa (Owen Teague) is afraid of, but his father’s wrath is up there. Having gone to great lengths (and heights) to secure his egg for the impending “bonding” ceremony, Noa is distraught when it is smashed during an encounter with an “Echo” (his tribe’s word forahuman).

Concerned that his “master of birds” Papa will be embarrasse­d and outraged, Noa decides a night mission to retrieve another is his only option.

Unfortunat­ely, he rides straight into trouble, a group of masked gorillas whom he unwittingl­y leads back to his village.

Watching with horror as his home is burned and family and friends massacred or taken capture, Noa only narrowly avoids suffering a grisly fate himself.

Vowing to find them and bring them home, he follows the raiding party’s trail, encounteri­ng the last member of the Order of Caesar, orangutan Raka (Peter Macon), on his travels and discoverin­g that he himself is being followed.

While director Wes Ball (The Maze Runner trilogy) and screenwrit­er Josh Friedman (Spielberg’s 2005 War of the Worlds remake, Apple TV+’s Foundation) have cleverly crafted a propulsive, gripping, standalone story, it’s also one that feels – appropriat­ely enough – like a “missing link” between last decade’s RiseDawn-War triumvirat­e and the beloved 68 original.

Caesar is still a touchstone, while there are nods to scenes in Franklin J. Schaffner’s sci-fi classic and echoes of Jerry

Goldsmith’s unnerving and haunting score in John Paesano’s (The Hot Zone) soundscape.

Yes, not everything completely makes sense in terms of the two species’ de and e-volutions, and this is definitely a case of less-allegory, more action than Matt Reeves’ triptych, but the commitment to world-building, character and storytelli­ng (this entry feels like a cross between Mad Max and The Last of the Mohicans by way of Fallout, Apocalypse Now and The Searchers) is impressive, as are the sometimes truly breathtaki­ng and aweinspiri­ng visuals spearheade­d by our own wizards of Wellington Wētā FX.

It might no longer be a three-ring Serkis, but the full-bodied – and voiced – performanc­es of the likes of Teague (Eileen), Kevin Durand (Abigail) and Macon (The Orville), as well as human Freya Allen (The Witcher) are certainly noteworthy.

But perhaps what delighted me most about Kingdom was how many jaw-dropping, inventive and subversive twists Ball and Friedman have managed to keep hidden.

In an era where blockbuste­r trailers seem to give away all but what the actors had for lunch on day 25, it was truly refreshing to have some genuine surprises as this rollercoas­ter ride unfurled.

Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes is in cinemas nationwide.

 ?? ?? Owen Teague’s Noa finds himself on a mission to both avenge and save his family and friends in Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes.
Owen Teague’s Noa finds himself on a mission to both avenge and save his family and friends in Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes.

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