Dal'8 Maggio - Recommended Reviews - Il regista Wes Ball (trilogia di Maze Runner) dà vita ad un nuovo capitolo dell’epico franchise, ovvero, della celebre saga, de Il pianeta delle scimmie, che vede protagonista Owen Teague. La storia è ambientata diverse generazioni dopo il regno di Cesare, in cui le scimmie sono la specie dominante che vive in armonia e gli umani sono costretti a vivere nell'ombra...
"Volevo fare un grande salto temporale. È abbastanza significativo che Cesare sia ancora uno spirito guida nel film, ma la maggior parte dei suoi parenti non sono in questo film. Se gli ultimi tre film riguardavano l'età della pietra, qui possiamo vedere cosa succede quando entrano nell'età del bronzo".
Il regista Wes Ball
(Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes; Usa 2023; Azione Sci-Fi; 145'; Produz.: Disney Studios Australia, 20th Century Fox; Distribuz.: The Walt Disney Company Italia)
Wes Ball (trilogia Maze Runner) subentra alla regia del franchise dopo Matt Reeves, per dirigere il quarto capitolo della saga reboot, Il Regno del Pianeta delle Scimmie - composta da L'alba del pianeta delle scimmie, Apes Revolution - Il pianeta delle scimmie e The War - Il pianeta delle scimmie. Sono passati molti anni dall'epilogo del precedente episodio, dal momento che la comunità di scimmie protagoniste ha subito una sostanziale evoluzione: ed ecco che dall'età della pietra le scimmie fanno il loro ingresso nell'età del bronzo. E questo nuovo film, Il regno del pianeta delle scimmie non è che il primo episodio di una nuova trilogia annunciata.
Cast: Owen Teague (Noe) Freya Allan (Mae) Kevin Durand (Proximus Caesar) William H. Macy (Trevathan) Travis Jeffery (Anaya) Peter Macon (Raka) Lydia Peckham (Soona) Neil Sandilands (Koro) Sara Wiseman (Dar) Nina Gallas (Giovane)
Musica: John Paesano
Costumi: Mayes C. Rubeo
Scenografia: Daniel T. Dorrance
Fotografia: Gyula Pados
Montaggio: Dirk Westervelt, Dan Zimmerman
Effetti Speciali: Will Power-Trengove (supervisore)
Makeup: Jennifer Lamphee
Casting: Dylan Jury, Debra Zane
Scheda film aggiornata al:
04 Giugno 2024
Sinossi:
In breve:
Ambientato diverse generazioni dopo il regno di Cesare, in cui le scimmie sono la specie dominante che vive in armonia e gli umani sono costretti a vivere nell'ombra. Mentre un nuovo tirannico leader delle scimmie costruisce il suo impero, una giovane scimmia intraprende uno straziante viaggio che la porterà a mettere in discussione tutto ciò che conosceva sul passato e a fare scelte che definiranno un futuro sia per le scimmie che per gli umani.
Storyline:
The new Apes movie is set many years after the conclusion of 2017's War for the Planet of the Apes. Many apes societies have grown from when the Moses-like Caesar brought his people to an oasis, while humans have been reduced to a feral-like existence. Some ape groups have never heard of Caesar, while others have contorted his teaching to build burgeoning empires. In this setting, one ape leader begins to enslave other groups to find human technology, while another ape, who watched his clan be taken, embarks on a journey to find freedom. A young human woman becomes key to the latter's quest, although she has plans of her own.
Commento critico (a cura di Owen Gleiberman Variety)
‘Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes' Review: The Franchise Essentially Reboots with a Tale of Survival Set - At Last - in the Ape-Ruled Future
"Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes" opens with Caesar lying in state, surrounding by a horde of mourning chimps, as his dead body is covered in flowers and ritually set on fire. The movie then cuts to the jungle, where a title informs us that it's "many generations later." In other words, the tale we've been watching in the last three "Apes" films - "Rise of the Planet of the Apes" (2011), "Dawn of the Planet of the Apes" (2014), and "War for the Planet of the Apes" (2017) - is now ancient franchise history. I'm in the minority of viewers who would greet that news by saying, "Thank God"
When classic IP gets remade, there is always a double agenda: tapping a new audience,
but also serving the audience that has fond memories of the original. In "Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes," the center of dramatic action passes from Caesar over to Noa (Owen Teague), a serious young chimpanzee who has many Caesar-like qualities. Noa has grown up in the Eagle Clan, a thriving village of highly evolved apes whose tribal elders commune, in a mutually beneficial and holistic way, with predatory birds. The opening sequence has Noa and his two friends swinging at vertigo-inducing heights to pluck eggs out of eagle nests poised on clifftops. Noa proves himself to be a daredevil trapeze artist, but it's not long before he runs into a pack of lethal apes led by an armored gorilla on horseback who resembles the 1933 teeth-gnashing King Kong.
These apes destroy the village, leaving Noa on his own. After many scenes of wandering and tests of his survival skills,
he winds up at an ominous seaside empire of apes who rule the terrain (and any human straggler) just like the autocratic apes who were the antagonists of the original "Planet of the Apes," back in 1968.
Another way to put that is that it has taken the franchise this long - three movies, or six hours of screen time - to arrive at the place that it arguably should have started at. Then again, I have mostly found the origin story of Caesar, and of how the apes became intelligent, and all the "ethical" cud-chewing along the way to add up to an inflated blockbuster bore. Andy Serkis certainly gave a fine motion-capture performance as Caesar (handsome and glowering, his Caesar was like the Daniel Craig of hairy primates), but the movies themselves were bloated, full of didactic allegory yet built all too obviously around their action set pieces. Some
of that action was exciting, yet the films lacked the playful dystopian spark, the fanciful fun of "Planet of the Apes" (whose four sequels were, admittedly, mostly trash).
"Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes" is, in effect, a reboot of its own franchise. I'm not sure that the film is going to be any more successful than the previous three installments (or even as successful). It's essentially a two-and-a-half-hour chimp-in-the-wilderness adventure movie, directed by Wes Ball (the "Maze Runner" films) in the deliberately paced "classical" style of an episodic Hollywood saga from 50 years ago. It doesn't have a cast of big-name stars. Yet though the movie is too long, I was more gratified than not to sink into its relatively old-fashioned dramatic restraint.
Cut loose from his village, Noa meets a wise old orangutan named Raka (Peter Macon), with expressive small eyes and a funny way of pursing his lips;
he's a relic who still believes in the teachings of Caesar. Noa also meets a human wild child (Freya Allan) who's less innocent than she looks. As Noa, the gifted actor Owen Teague makes his presence felt. He displays not just cleverness and nobility but raw fear, an exciting quality to see in a hero.
The three characters team up, but Noa is eventually dragged to the ape kingdom, presided over by a fearsome cult leader named Proximus Caesar (Kevin Durand), who has stolen the authority - but not the morality - of his namesake. Proximus takes a special interest in Noa, who is essentially a prison-camp inmate, reunited with his mother and friends, who must defeat the empire from within. Here and there, we're shown signs of the human civilization that's been destroyed: the carcasses of buildings, escalators, and elevated train tracks, overgrown with shrubbery. Yet human technology is still
the holy grail. The ape kingdom is built around a silo, with a closed vault of a door, that contains many wonders within (like weapons). That vault is Pandora's Box, and Proximus wants to unlock it so desperately that he'll sacrifice a handful of his apes every day to electroshock the door open.
Kevin Durand's performance as Proximus, the leering bonobo monarch, is a piece of insinuating theater - he's a leader who's made the mistake of thinking everything is about him. And the rest of the cast makes its mark, from Sarah Wiseman as Noa's heartstrong mother to Peter Macon as the whimsical seen-it-all Raka to William H. Macy as a scavenger who has carved out a place for himself in the ape kingdom like Dennis Hopper's photographer in "Apocalypse Now." "Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes" invites us to embrace the drama of apes fighting apes. By the
end, though, in what is in effect a teaser for the next sequel, it looks as if the franchise's blowhard version of the human race will be back after all. That could be enough to make you want to escape from the planet of the apes.
Recommended Review: by Owen Gleiberman, "Variety"
************************************************ Moore Recommended Reviews:
Proximus Caesar (Kevin Durand): Oggi è un giorno magnifico!
Noe (Owen Teague): Quando dormo, vedo strane cose.
Raka (Peter Macon): Ricordi.
Noe: Non ricordi. Cose nuove. Vedo tutto.
Raka: Questo non è... tutto.