Film Review: ‘Dawn of the Planet of the Apes’
Guy Lodge in Variety
Magazine
It’s always darkest
before the dawn, goes the saying — but in resuming a franchise already
suspended on a downbeat note, “Dawn of the Planet of the Apes” sees the simian revolution
reaching unprecedented levels of bleak anarchy. An altogether smashing sequel
to 2011′s better-than-expected “Rise of the Planet of the Apes,” this vivid,
violent extension of humanoid ape Caesar’s troubled quest for independence
bests its predecessor in nearly every technical and conceptual department, with
incoming helmer Matt Reeves conducting the proceedings with more assertive
genre elan than “Rise” journeyman Rupert Wyatt. Entirely replacing the previous
film’s human cast, but crucially promoting Andy Serkis’
remarkable motion-capture inhabitation of Caesar to centerstage, “Dawn” ought
to go ape at the global box office starting July 9, smoothing the path for
further sequels to test the franchise’s complexity.
Following the robust
performance of “Rise of the Planet of the Apes” — which garnered warm reviews,
more than $480 million worldwide and an Oscar nomination for its stunning
effects work — “Cloverfield” director Reeves inherits the Pierre
Boulle-originated franchise in considerably better condition than Wyatt did,
considering the almighty whiff of Tim Burton’s 2001 “Planet of the Apes”
remake. Credibility restored, then, it’d have been easy to get complacent,
recycling the “Rise’s” most impressive setpieces and welding them to a
hasty resuscitation of its movie-science narrative. Instead, Reeves and
returning writers Rick Jaffa and Amanda Silver (joined by “The Wolverine”
scribe Mark Bomback) have taken a different tonal tack, fashioning the new
installment as an out-and-out war drama, with surprising subdivisions in its
central conflict of man vs. beast, and battle scenes to do Weta Digital
godfather Peter Jackson proud.
The action begins
approximately a decade after “Rise” left off, with a pre-credits montage of
global news reports filling in the subsequent drastic developments: The ALZ-113
virus (or simian flu) unleashed at the end of the prior film has wiped out most
of the world’s human population, with a survival rate of less than one in 500.
It’s a slight red herring of an introduction, given that the virus is no longer
the most immediate threat to man’s day-to-day existence. With all government
functions suspended and nuclear power critically depleted, any remaining bands
of survivors exist in spartan, unlit isolation; if the flu doesn’t get to them
first, the lack of basic resources will.
San Francisco — or the
post-ape-ocalyptic remainder of it, at least — is once more the setting,
brilliantly realized by production designer James Chinlund as a gangrenous
wasteland of vegetation-swamped slumhouses, the city’s erstwhile landmarks
glumly clothed in rust and moss. Its few residents are led by Dreyfus (Gary
Oldman), a former military man bent on revenge against the apes for the loss of
his family to the virus. More sanguine is Malcolm (Jason Clarke), who
spearheads a project to recover the city’s electricity by regaining control of
the O’Shaughnessy Dam. That entails encroaching on the forested domain of
the neighboring ape community, still ruled with a firm but hairy hand by
Caesar; with relations between man and ape already fragile, this violation
throws fuel on the flames of civil unrest.
Though Caesar responds
to the diplomatic overtures of Malcolm and his medic wife, Ellie (Keri
Russell), and grants them limited access to the dam, not all his subjects
approve. Particularly irate is Koba (Toby Kebbell), a hot-headed, human-hating
ape with mutinous designs on his leader’s position; when an equivalently
reactionary member of Malcolm’s party is revealed to have broken Caesar’s “no
guns” condition of cooperation, the resulting furor gives Koba the impetus to
launch his aggressive counter-movement. (Sadly, the writers resist giving
Caesar the line “Et tu, Koba?”) The script elegantly constructs its human and
ape communities as opposed but markedly similar ecosystems, each one internally
fractured along lines of relative tolerance toward the other.
The “Apes” franchise has
always been a politically loaded one, and this latest entry states its
left-wing credo in ways both allegorically implicit and bluntly direct. (You’d
have to be pretty obtuse to miss the pro-gun-control subtext attached to
misdeeds on both sides of the man-monkey battle.) While the previous film
functioned as something of a cautionary tale against man’s destructive meddling
with his environment, “Dawn” apportions blame a little more equally, as the
beasts (introduced in a thrilling, technically jaw-dropping faceoff against a
grizzly bear) are shown to be no less reckless an influence on the biosphere
than their former superiors. “I always think ape better than human,” Caesar
admits to Malcolm, his speech patterns having evolved rather rapidly even over
the course of this film. “I see now how like them we are.” It’s a reverse
epiphany that would have Jane Goodall in tears.
Regardless of whose side
audiences might take, however, the fallout is inarguably spectacular. Reeves stages the ensuing crossfire in the human
colony with much the same sense of kinetic panic he brought to the flipped
monster-movie mechanics of “Cloverfield,” albeit with far more technical dazzle
this time. With most of the below-the-line talent new to the franchise, “Dawn”
has an aesthetic entirely distinct from that of “Rise,” with Michael Seresin’s
antsy camerawork painting from a strikingly dank palette, and Michael
Giacchino’s chorally embellished score occasionally evoking the grandeur of
Howard Shore’s work on the “Lord of the Rings” trilogy. The editing by William
Hoy and Stan Salfas rotates multiple points of drama before hurtling into a
too-busy finale that sells Oldman’s arc particularly short: Still, while nearly
half an hour longer than its predecessor, the film certainly doesn’t feel it.
Naturally, though, the
services of effects wizards Joe Letteri and Dan Lemmon have been retained — and
with even more astonishing results this time, with the enlarged population and
evolved capabilities of the ape community (who can now ride horses, handle
firearms and goodness knows what else) posing fresh logistical challenges that
are seamlessly met. The fusion of the film’s motion-capture work with its
sophisticated fight choreography is particularly staggering.
That Caesar’s community
now seems so integrated and completely characterized is certainly due to
Letteri and Lemmon’s magic, though much credit should also go to the actors
behind the illusion. Serkis must by now be used to the superlatives heaped upon
his agile fusion of performance and image in many a CGI spectacle, though he’s
in particularly empathetic, emotionally specific form here; Kebbell’s brute
physicality and wild-eyed animosity, meanwhile, burns through the digital
disguise. Despite Clarke’s everyman likability and some reliably gonzo
posturing from Oldman, the less hirsute ensemble seems a little bland by
comparison. Perhaps the film’s on the side of the apes after all.
Film Review: 'Dawn
of the Planet of the Apes'
Reviewed at Moscow Film Festival
(closer, noncompeting), June 27, 2014. MPAA Rating: PG-13. Running time: 130
MIN.
Production
A 20th Century Fox release and
presentation of a Chernin Entertainment production in association with TSG
Entertainment, Ingenious Media. Produced by Peter Chernin, Dylan Clark, Rick
Jaffa, Amanda Silver. Executive producers, Thomas M. Hammel, Mark Bomback.
Crew
Directed by Matt Reeves. Screenplay,
Rick Jaffa, Amanda Silver, Mark Bomback, based on characters created by Jaffa,
Silver. Camera (color),
Michael Seresin; editors, William Hoy, Stan
Salfas; music, Michael Giacchino; production designer, James Chinlund; art
director, Aaron Naaman Marshall; set decorator, Amanda Moss Serino;
costume designer, Melissa Bruning; sound (Dolby Atmos), Ed White;
supervising sound editors, Douglas Murray, Will Files; re-recording
mixers, Andy Nelson, Files; senior visual effects supervisor, Joe Letteri;
visual effects supervisor, Dan Lemmon; visual effects, Weta Digital; stunt
coordinators, Charles Croughwell, Marny Eng, Terry Notary; associate producer,
Jennifer Teves; assistant director, Mathew Dunne; second unit directors,
Brad Parker, Gary Powell; second unit camera, Gary Capo; casting, Debra Zane.
With
Andy Serkis, Jason Clarke, Gary
Oldman, Keri Russell, Toby Kebbell, Kodi Smit-McPhee, Kirk Acevedo, Jon Eyez,
Enrique Murciano, Terry Notary, Judy Greer, Nick Thurston, Karin Konoval, Keir
O'Donnell, Kevin Rankin.
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