
Planet of the Apes
Hits 30:
And She's None the Worse for
Wear
by Dave Liljengren
"I left both
earth and the 20th Century without regret..."
intones Charlton Heston as Astronaut Taylor in the
original trailer to Francis Schaffner's 1968 science
fiction film, Planet of the Apes.
In this, the 30th
anniversary year of POTA's release, Heston's
stray promotional patter rings more true than ever.
In two years, barring a nuclear flare-up of the kind
said to have destroyed the humans in that treasured
piece of simian sci-fi, all of us will leave the 20th
century behind, likely without regret. And as Heston
himself, born in Chicago in 1923, has spent 75 years
with the weight of this world on his shoulders, it's
probably not long before the Oscar-winning Ben
Hur charioteer leaves this "green and
insignificant planet" behind.
Meanwhile, back on
what remains of terra firma and the 1900s, there is
talk of a Hollywood "Apes" remake. Fan
sources on the web say this project has been
"green lighted." A simpler effort in the
direction of reawakening POTA interest would
involve a simple theatrical re-release of the
original with digitized soundtrack, but no such buzz
is circulating.
The thirtieth
anniversary of POTA means nothing so much as
the fact myself and my second generation TV baby
cohorts are now comfortably in mid-life. For a
generation of boys, now men in their thirties, POTA
was our first free-vee taste of not only
big-budget sci-fi, but of adult cynicism and the
gripping power of unmistakable,
O-Henry-to-the-tenth-power, ironic plot twists.
When we reached the
stage of primate development where The Wizard of
Oz as a children's story ceased to fascinate us
we turned on in droves to TV screenings of POTA
and its four lesser progeny. The efficacy of POTA
parodies on "The Simpsons" and
elsewhere is modern day proof of this 70s boyhood
phenomena.
Despite more of the
heavy-handed gloom that had been so appealling in the
first Apes movie-- it's hard to arrive at a more dour
plot twist than Taylor's doomsday bomb detonation at
the close of "Beneath the Planet of the
Apes"-- the sequels never captivated me as
thoroughly as the series opener. When my canon of
unmissable reruns grew to include a dark little show
from the fifties with an enigmatic narrator, I would
understand why.
POTA's
screenplay was co-written by the Night Gallery
opening, Twilight Zoner himself, Rod
Serling. The "You maniacs! You blew it up!
Awww... Damn you... damn you all to hell!"
ending to POTA is his grandest closing
shocker in a career built on sledgehammer
denouements. As the fullest development, the magnum
opus, of Serling's brand of preachy and allegorical,
yet still accessible, science fiction, POTA's
place in the canon of mid to late-century American
Environments is as secure as Bill "Major
Healey" Dailey's place in the eternal honor
guard of comic TV sidekickdom.
Serling's involvement
with the Apes series ended (wisely) after the first
movie. Because of this, the other four movies differ
so sharply in quality and internal consistency that--
while cocktail party Apes scoffers should probably
not be allowed to make snide fodder of them-- they
are of little use in a serious Apes discussion. The
qualitative distance between "Beneath the POTA"
and "POTA" is as clearly defined
as the distance between "In the Ghetto" and
"Hound Dog." One rocks and the other
doesn't. "In the Ghetto" and "Beneath
the POTA" can both be entertaining in
small doses, but they should not be confused with the
genuine articles. Elvis' legitimacy ended in the army
and the Apes series' ended at the Statue of Liberty.
All else is epilogue.
But there is enough
material in POTA to sustain worthwhile
inquiry. A prophet of doom who succeeded best in
warning us what not to do, Serling uses men in ape
masks to perfect certain of his quirky anti-themes.
Religious tyranny, human intolerance, and human
shortsightedness all take center stage in POTA.
Serling's religious
whipping boy is POTA's enigmatic Dr. Zaius.
When first we meet the bad doctor, the "Chief
Prosecutor and Defender of the Faith," as
Heston's Taylor calls him, he is working like a
medieval pope to squelch the research of Cornelius
and Zira, two chimpanzees pursuing the theory that
apes evolved from humans. This theory is dangerous to
Dr. Zaius because he, an orangutan, is the
ecclesiastical numero uno of the ape civilization and
the scriptural creation account for his religion,
given to the Apes by The Lawgiver, (perhaps a Serling
retro-snigger at Heston as Moses in "The Ten
Commandments") clearly states that Apes
descended from the mute humans inhabiting their
world.
But Zaius is not only
a religious leader, he is the chief of scientific
inquiry as well. There is a reason for this, we will
learn. When Cornelius and Zira present their evidence
of intelligent humans, Zaius does not behave in the
way we would expect an inquiring scientific mind to
do. He attempts to force their silence by threatening
their careers. When Taylor breaks the rules of ape
court and pleads for his sentient and reproductive
life in the reverse Monkey Trial at the center of the
film, essentially proving wrong Zaius's assertion,
lifted from sacred writ, that there can be no such
thing as an intelligent human, Zaius refuses to
listen and shuts down the proceeding.
Zaius then meets
privately and talks ape to man with Taylor in the
movie's most moving scene. "I've known of your
coming for years and I've dreaded it," he says,
explaining he's been privy to evidence of a human
civilization for years and has been actively covering
up such ideas before they got to the ape populace.
The apes need an ordered society and an
unchallengeable religion, he says, in order to
maintain an ordered society and not destroy
themselves...
Later when Taylor
escapes with Cornelius and Zira to revisit one of
Cornelius's archaeological digs. Zaius and a
contingent of gorilla (literally) soldiers catch up
with them. Zaius is forced to examine Cornelius's
irrefutable evidence of an ancient human
civilization. Zaius responds by destroying the
evidence and arresting Cornelius and Zira. In a
shrewd display of mercy, Zaius allows Taylor and Nova
to escape in order for Taylor to find "his
destiny." The destiny to which Zaius is
referring is the half buried Lady Liberty and
Taylor's epiphany that mankind both has and will
always destroy itself. Thus, as Jesus allows the the
rich young ruler to go off and experience the
spiritual dangers of wealth on his own, Zaius allows
Taylor to ride the beach and discover both mankind's
impulse to self-destruction and Zaius's essential
rectitude in deep-sixing ape inquiries into a human
past.
While Serling may have
painted religious types as retrograde deceivers and
members of a decidedly non-holy Tri-lateral
Commission bent on impeding intellectual growth, it
can also be said that he was no humanist. Serling was
not shy about sharing testimony of his belief in
certain nuclear annihilation. Such sermons loom large
in both POTA and The Twilight Zone.
Serling was the mad prophet warning of both the
dangers of enforced orthodoxy and of unchecked human
competition.
I'm guessing that
Serling believed the societal acceptance of the
theory of evolution and rejection of biblical
creation accounts would bring about the end of
religion. We're 30 years past POTA and such
late century phenomena as Marshall Appelwhite, the
Promisekeepers, and car bumper fish have already
proven him wrong. If Serling were alive, however, (he
left earth and the 20th century on June 28, 1975, as
a result of complications during heart surgery) such
targets as those three would be high on his list of
possible subject matter in any cable rebirth of Twilight
Zone.
Serling's take on
rascism is found in the three-tiered ape society. In POTA
society, orangutans, with their light colored fur,
were at the top, holding most of the positions
requiring intellect, while chimpanzees were relegated
to glorified house servant status, and gorillas were
left in the rain as field hands and mercenaries. When
Cornelius ponders the glass-ceiling he has reached at
Ape University because he is a chimpanzee and not an
orangutan, Serling wanted America of 1968-- the year
of the Martin Luther King assassination-- to look at
their own arbitrary distinctions based on skin color.
These conflicts are not resolved in the course of the
film. Rascism, Serling seems to admit, is something
which can't be unwound in a screenplay.
Serling clearly had a
soft spot for the fauna of this world. It's hard to
watch the caging of humans, and their use as test
subjects, and not rethink our own failures of
compassion regarding the furry, and non-furry,
friends with whom we share this planet.
As for leviathan
Heston and his acting skills, in POTA and
elsewhere, I'm not going to champion them. His
unusual range was larger than myth, yet still
limited. When he took roles requiring him to
precision tune the pomp and thunder theatrics-- as
was so in Orson Welles' "A Touch of Evil,"
where Heston tried to portray an emotional Tejano--
the results were not for the squeamish.
But I will say Chuck
was a bona fide movie star. His pompous demeanor and
dulcet tones were popular for a time with directors
and moviegoers. Movie actors, even the best ones--
even moody Leonardo and beautiful Kate-- are props
that talk. The director is the artist at work in the
cinema. In that context, Heston as a young hunk was a
prop who spoke well. When mid-century movie makers
needed a take-charge elocutionist to further their
American Dream propaganda, Heston was ready, willing,
and naturally gifted with Billy Graham's patrician
good looks.
If we ask how come he
didn't grow artistically and change with the times,
we already know the answer. For one, there are few
who can do it. Paul Newman is one, but the list is
short. More accurately, it boils down to the range
thing. Audiences can stomach pompous men when they're
cute. We'll deal with them through their twenties,
thirties, and a year or two into their forties, but
after that, if there's no wisdom of the ages, no
likably vulnerable crack in their armor, no
self-effacing charm or bright smile, we'll look
elsewhere when investing our $7.50 at the box office.
POTA came
late in the game for Heston, (he was 45) and it was
his last shining moment. It would take him decades to
realize this, but it's nonetheless true. POTA
worked as well as it did because Serling was an old
school Hollywood gangsta himself, still interested in
fighting the ideological battles of the fifties even
as "Tet Offensive," "bad trip,"
and "seriously overcrowded correctional
facilities" became household phrases. And if a
battle for the soul of the 1950s is being fought,
anywhere, at any time, who better to have on your
side than Charlton Heston?
There is a proto
hippie ape in POTA, and an inter-species
kiss, but Serling's attempt at 1968 contemporaneity
is half-hearted. Even as Taylor tells the simian
youth at POTA's end to "Keep them
flying... the flags of discontent," Taylor rides
a horse into the sunset, his obedient, mute,
fur-bikinied, woman cuddling close behind him. Taylor
is no Acquarian age hero, he is the last Gary Cooper,
the last western hero whom audiences will follow
anywhere, even to the Statue of Liberty and the
sobering realization that their destruction is
inevitable.
Charlton Heston Reads The
Old Man and the Sea
Back To Your Regularly
Scheduled Pandomag.com
|
|