Review War for the Planet of the Apes

This article comes from Den of Geek Great britain.

Concluding October, Den Of Geek packed a pocketbook full of scarves, gloves and woolly hats and ventured off to Vancouver. There, in a dank woodland far outside the metropolis, manager Matt Reeves was in the throes of shooting the third chapter in 20th Century Fox's Apes saga, State of war For The Planet Of The Apes. A sequel to 2014'southward bleak, spectacular Dawn Of The Planet Of The Apes, information technology continues the saga of Caesar, the leader of the burgeoning civilisation of intelligent apes, and the seemingly unstoppable war sparked in the previous movie.

With the launch of the first trailer, the covers are gradually coming off what nosotros're hoping will be one of adjacent twelvemonth'due south smartest and most satisfying summertime movies. Then from the dewy forest of Canada, hither's what we learned about the forthcoming Apes sequel…

True to its championship, the motion-picture show will begin with a big battle sequence

Y'all may call up that, at the end of Dawn Of The Planet Of The Apes, one of the final exchanges between Caesar and human protagonist Malcolm (Jason Clarke) referred to an inbound army of reinforcements. State of war takes identify two years later on the events of the last film, and those reinforcements are on the hunt for Caesar, who's become a kind of Osama Bin Laden as far every bit the humans are concerned.

"They know he'due south the leader of the apes," producer Dylan Clark tells us, "and they remember that if they kill Caesar then the apes volition be in disarray. In this opening battle, they got close; they found a hidden trench that goes all along [the forest], and the apes hid their fortress back hither somewhere… Considering the human ground forces is advancing to a great degree, some apes start to think possibly they should help the humans rather than fight them. Are they every bit duplicitous as Koba? No, but maybe more cowardly – and every bit dissentious."

Some apes accept turned against Caesar, and now fight on the side of the humans

In the sequence nosotros saw being filmed, Caesar (Andy Serkis in his grey mo-cap adjust) addresses some soldiers captured in the wake of that opening battle sequence. Among the armed forces types is an ape who was fighting on the humans' side; he's one of the apes who were loyal to the treacherous Koba (Toby Kebbell) who sparked the whole war in the first identify.

"The apes followed Koba," Caesar says in his gravelly voice." They tried to impale me. They fear I do not forgive, so now they serve you just to survive."

Woody Harrelson plays a colonel bent on destroying the apes

Caesar'southward nemesis in this flick is a human named the Colonel, played by Woody Harrelson. With the virus that created the intelligent apes and killed much of humanity a greater threat than always, the disharmonize between species has reached a new height – and the Colonel is willing to become to any lengths necessary to salve his own kind.

It'll be shot on 65mm flick

Dawn Of The Planet Of The Apes volition join the likes of Paul Thomas Anderson's The Chief and Quentin Tarantino'southward The Hateful Viii as one of a scattering of modern films shot on 65mm film. According to visual effects producer Ryan Stafford, the decision came from Matt Reeves' desire to give the film an epic look akin to a western or a classic historical drama like Lawrence Of Arabia – David Lean's proper name was ane brought up by both Stafford and producer Dylan Clark, in fact.

…65mm will better capture the film's huge landscapes

Wide shots are going to be a key component in State of war For The Planet Of The Apes' storytelling, with concept art shown off during our set visit depicting wide, desolate landscapes. One shot shows apes on horseback riding across a embankment – an unabashed homage to a classic moment from 1968's Planet Of The Apes. Another shows an ape on horseback, riding straight towards united states, clutching a burning flag. Still some other depicts a prison made from huge concrete blocks, which is, we're told, a place where Harrelson's Colonel keeps a large grouping of Caesar's captured friends.

"It's a couple of films in one, I call up," actor Terry Notary says of War. "It's a road trip, it's an escape movie, it's a jailbreak movie, it'due south a revenge movie."

Producer Dylan Clark adds that a second major battle sequence takes place at this prison, which is probably where the escaping and jailbreaking all come in. As for the revenge, Clark's understandably more than tight-lipped: all he'll talk about is a "tragic event" that takes place at some point in the movie.

…shooting on 65mm causes a few technical challenges

"65mm equates to 6.5K, and there'due south not enough computers in the world to return the apes at that resolution," Ryan Stafford tells united states. "Then nosotros'll be rendering at a much lower resolution, but we will have the O-neg, so to speak, at 6K so that style we tin can do really hi-res matte paintings and set reconstructions and things similar that. It gives the states a lot more flexibility in post to play with the resolution of those plates and bringing it down to our delivery resolution. So the highest resolution I retrieve the movie will exist released in will be 4K."

There will be planes

"Humans have guns and planes, while the apes are growing in number," Clark says of the coming battle. "They're shooting guns in this picture, and so they're picking up stuff, just we're keeping that residue where they act like apes and non similar humans."

A major sequence will take place in snow

Dorsum when Dawn Of The Planet Of The Apes was beingness finished, Matt Reeves poked his head round the door at Weta and said, thing-of-factly, "The next motion-picture show: snow. I want to put an ape in the snow."

That uncomplicated-sounding paradigm volition grade a major sequence in War, equally Caesar goes off on a revenge mission across a postal service-apocalyptic America. Even with the advances in mo-cap technology that take gone on since Rising Of The Planet Of The Apes in 2011, these scenes of apes in snow requite Weta a fairly major technical hurdle to clear.

"Taking the apes out of the equation, snow's difficult to brand information technology look real," Stafford says. "Shades of white are very, very difficult – it's difficult to shoot, it's hard to light, it's difficult to render. Throw the apes into the mix, and it but becomes a very new territory. We tin send the performers through the snow, but they motion differently, they're on crutches, their human foot sizes and fists are dissimilar. So nosotros have to carelessness everything that we did in-camera and create it all digitally."

"So we're shooting motility-capture actors in the snow," Dylan Clark says, "which is fun and terrifying, because we can't even get through the mud on time. So we'll exist shooting here for xvi years."

"That'due south a joke," Clark quickly adds.

Wait, what was that about Caesar's revenge mission?

Ah, glad you asked. Koba may have been the ane who hated humans in the previous movie, but every bit the state of war between man and ape reaches new levels in this chapter, Caesar'south mental attitude towards our species begins to harden.

"Caesar, having always tried to find a peaceful solution to disharmonize, is then thrust into a position where his emotions overtake him," Andy Serkis tells the states betwixt takes. "He finds that he can't disassociate himself from his desire for revenge against human beings. That'south a large switch for this character, considering up until this point, Caesar'southward always tried to stand up betwixt the world of man and animal, considering that's exactly what he represents. At present he tin no longer do that. And so he goes on a trail, a journey, into a very dark place, where he seeks revenge on humankind."

It sounds a petty bit Apocalypse Now

Funnily enough, producer Dylan Clark brought upwards that very film, as he told us that Colonel Kurtz, the maniacal character played by Marlon Brando in Francis Ford Coppola's archetype war moving picture, was a template for Woody Harrelson's war machine leader.

"We looked at Colonel Kurtz," Clark says, "and i of the most interesting pieces of that graphic symbol was, before Charlie Sheen goes up river, he goes through the dossier, and he's looking at all the stuff that Marlon Brando was before he became the monster that is Kurtz. We thought in that location were a lot of interesting character traits in there. He was a Navy SEAL; he just had a very specific viewpoint of how this war needed to be fought. The audience looked at it through Sheen's optics and saw the horror of it."

So War For The Planet Of The Apes will exist quite a harsh movie, then

It certainly seems like it. Andy Serkis echoed the producers' suggestion that something "cataclysmic" happens to Caesar that sparks his revenge mission. Dylan Clark adds that, at some point, events force Caesar to "practice something horrible". It'due south non all doom and gloom, though; like the terminal movie, War promises to offer lots of starkly beautiful images, like the ones nosotros described in that concept art before. Another keen sounding idea is the apes' hidden fortress, which Clark says is subconscious behind a waterfall.

"That was one of Matt'southward corking ideas. He wanted to showtime this movie in a location that felt familiar to the last movie, so information technology feels like nosotros're in the forest again," Clark says. "But later this epic battle, we get-go to take the audience and the apes into something that we haven't seen earlier. In this movie, we really idea long and hard about how nosotros can requite the audience something that looks totally different."

There are lots more ape characters in this one

According to Stafford, at that place are xv named ape characters in War – more than than at that place were in the previous ii movies. Ane is a character called Spear; some other, currently unnamed ape is played by actor Steve Zahn. Nosotros're guessing he's important to the plot, because the producers are very vague about who he is.

Terry Notary makes incredible ape noises

Seriously, those noises yous hear in the movies? They're largely created by the actors themselves without any digital augmentation, and the sound is positively spine-chilling in real life: howls, grunts, what he calls 'hoots'. It's properly intimidating stuff.

Actor Karin Konoval based her character Maurice on a real orangutan

Maurice is ane of our favourite characters in the Apes franchise; a quiet, wise orangutan, he'due south the teacher and sage among Caesar'due south grouping. The histrion who plays him, Karin Konaval, explained to us that Maurice is based on a real orangutan, Towan, who lives in a zoo in Seattle.

"That's where I constitute the soul of Maurice," Konoval tells us. "Since 2010, when I met him, I connected to get to know orangutans whether I was doing another [Apes] movie or not. They became very strong in my personal life, and getting involved in the conservation movement as well. Anyway, I exercise continue to visit with them in Seattle near every half-dozen to 8 weeks."

Konaval was brilliant, and made the states want to strike upwardly our own friendship with an orangutan.

War is far from the end of the Apes franchise

If you were thinking that the current Apes run might conclude as a trilogy, we have news for you: Dylan Clark says that the current motion picture won't be backing direct into the events of the 1968 original.

"This is a complete story, just we also think we've done enough to introduce other avenues to become down," Clark says. "That would leave a lot of time to spend exploring an interesting drama earlier the astronaut lands and discovers that the planet's been taken over by apes. […] We know where that story goes, but what we really like is seeing a nation of intelligent apes start to realise what kind of ability they have in their order and how information technology interacts with humans."

Clark wouldn't exist drawn on how many movies might come up after War ("We kind of take information technology 1 by one, he says), but if you've loved the Apes saga so far, then rest assured that, to provide a final quote from the producer himself: "This is definitely non the end in terms of Charlton Heston showing up."

War For The Planet Of The Apes is out in Great britain cinemas on the 14th July 2017.

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Source: https://cohort.game-host.org/movies/war-for-the-planet-of-the-apes-15-things-we-learned-from-the-set/

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