It's no secret I'm a big fan of the Planet of the Apes movies, starting with Heston. I didn't like the Tim Burton attempt at a reboot in the slightest, but Rise of the Planet of the Apes got me back to the theater.
The first time I saw this movie, it kind of got ruined by a drunk and/ or disorderly woman sitting behind me. You hate to think something like that will color how you see a movie, but, boy howdy.
In the comfort of my own home, and with only Jamie and the dogs here to act drunk and disorderly, it was a lot less distracting to get through.
The movie begins after the Simian-Flu, the modern answer to the nuclear fears of the Cold War era Apes movies, has devastated humanity over the course of a decade or more. In the forests North of the Golden Gate Bridge, the apes that escaped in the climax of Rise of the Planet of the Apes have settled and built a society. They hunt, live in structures, communicate via sign language and seem to carry the intelligence of man. A handy thing as "struggling with intellect versus the baser instincts of man" is the driving force of the picture.
In the comfort of my own home, and with only Jamie and the dogs here to act drunk and disorderly, it was a lot less distracting to get through.
The movie begins after the Simian-Flu, the modern answer to the nuclear fears of the Cold War era Apes movies, has devastated humanity over the course of a decade or more. In the forests North of the Golden Gate Bridge, the apes that escaped in the climax of Rise of the Planet of the Apes have settled and built a society. They hunt, live in structures, communicate via sign language and seem to carry the intelligence of man. A handy thing as "struggling with intellect versus the baser instincts of man" is the driving force of the picture.