We live in a time where we experience more freedom in the way we enjoy life, among human’s, and new cultural habits that have been developing throughout years. Technology is making humans’ life easier and more enjoyable, filled with new access to reaching new opportunities that would have been impossible in the past. Technology has facilitated today’s way of living making it faster and more efficient, but it has also affected our society. In the films, Planet of The Apes the original version and the version in 2014, both illustrate how technology has had an affected on our cultural society by supplying a higher demand for violent in everyday life as in films becoming icons for today’s way of life. Providing audience violence which is increasing in which is becoming accepted in today’s and becoming part of our cultural society. In Planet of the Apes produced in 2001 and the remake version produced in 2014, both films illustrate changes in today’s cultural living. In addition Planet of the Apes illustrates an air force astronaut who crash-lands on a mysterious planet where evolved, talking Apes dominate a race of primitive humans. While the Remake Film named Dawn to the Planet of the Apes illustrated in 2014 consisted of A growing nation of genetically evolved apes led by Caesar (main character,) is threatened by a band of human survivors of the devastating virus unleashed a decade earlier. Dawn to the Planet of the Apes show how Hollywood has made advencements in technology
“Anthropology is the most humanistic of the sciences and the most scientific of the humanities” – Alfred L. Kroeber
Planet of the Apes takes the world as we know it and turns it upside down and in so doing questions almost every belief and value system of mankind. Written and produced at a time when America and much of the world was in the midst of a cultural change and people were questioning and protesting everything the screenwriters take make this film a satirical and thought provoking commentary on the big questions of the era. The Vietnam War, the struggle for equal treatment of African Americans and a general mindset of questioning religion and traditional values were the things that made up the American culture of the nineteen sixties. The film grapples with and makes ant attempt to address most of the issues of the period in which it was written. Three thousand years into the future man has devolved into a non-speaking primitive being while apes have evolved into intellectual beings capable of rational thought and speech. Taylor, the captain of the spaceship and tragic hero, speaks his last words before hibernating his way into the distant future, he states that he is leaving the twentieth century and asks a question, “Tell me, though, does man, that marvel of the universe, that glorious paradox who sent me to the stars, still make war against his brother ... keep his neighbor's children starving?” Taylor, a cynic and skeptic, sees man as violent and destructive. When he arrives in the future to a world where apes are supreme the antagonist of the film, Dr.
The short story by the waters of Babylon and the movie planet of the apes were both futuristic stories. They also both showed the evil sides of today’s man and the chaos and mass destruction that we are capable of accomplishing. They portrayed today’s man as selfish, violent, and full of hate and rage. By the waters of Babylon was written from the point of view of a boy close to becoming a man who knew nothing of his past civilization. Whereas in the movie planet of the apes it was from the point of view of a man that had come nearly directly from that past civilization. The main people in charge keep knowledge from the public so they do not know the
In the essay, “The Worthy Rise of the Planet of the Apes,” Kelly Pietruszynski (the author) accesses the profitability and longevity of the movies leading up to and including “Rise of the Planet of the Apes.” In the Essay, Pietruszynski hits on a few main points about the movie One being the spectacular plot, Pietruszynski explains how the plot is so spectacular. Pietruszynski says, “Any attempt to explain how apes become intelligent and humans stupid is finally going to stretch credibility…However is plausible.”(pg 132). Another being the special effects. The special effects are all computer generated like Caesar. Pietruszynski think this adds to the plot.
The Planet of the Apes franchise completely overtook the film industry starting in 1968, after the original film hit theaters. Since then, there has been a reboot, two sequels, merchandise, and even a TV series. This film was such a success for many reasons- its clever allegories to race, religion, and politics, the phenomenal makeup and costume design, the world-building that was almost unheard of in 1968 (maybe even giving inspiration for the world-building in the first Star Wars film which hit theaters in 1977), you name it. However, there is one thing above all that comes to the mind of both film buffs and newbies alike when one thinks of the original Planet of the Apes-- and that is the phenomenal twist ending.
This movie deals with a great number of problems that appear in everyday social life. If you examine the story and look closer, it is very easy to come up with a conclusion that the movie is not all about the apes, but deeply about mankind. It is a tale about human lifestyle/condition or way of life and the way humans connect with their natural environment and with apes. The
The Planet of the Apes movie has given a realistic perception on what the world would be like if apes had full social and economic power, unaware of any other higher power.
Chapter 9 offers a very clear overview of how and when we become human (Bingham and Souza, 2009). For instance, the main individuals from the human lineage need numerous components that recognize us from different primates. Despite the fact that it has been a troublesome mission, we are nearer than any time to knowing the mother of every one of us. Up to this point, the evolutionary events that encompassed the inception of the hominin lineage — which incorporates modern humans and our fossil relatives — were for all intents and purposes obscure, and our phylogenetic relationship with living African apes was profoundly faced off regarding.
From lavish to savage is the underlying scheme in Edgar Rice Burroughs Tarzan of The Apes and his short story The Land That Time Forgot. These two works were widely read in Edgar Rice Burroughs’ time period, especially during World War I as he describes the racism during this time period. He particularly describes how the British were set aside and betrayed as the bad, but unknowingly the good. In these two works he tries to explain throughout his novels the level of racism between the Germans and the British. Racism is demonstrated in Tarzan of the Apes as civilized verses savage (being raised by wild animals).
Everyone has their own certain opinions on things in life. Most people today are debating on whether or not man came from ape. I personally don’t believe in evolution. If God says he created man, then that's what happened. If you look at an apes foot, you'll find that it looks nothing like a human foot. Not a lot is the same. And also, I say that if ape turned into man, why are there still apes today?
It seems that the tables have turned since the release of Dawn of the Planet of the Apes in July of 2014. With the humans nearly in existence and the Apes finally living in peace what could be more captivating then the Apes being the only source for the human’s survival. The Republic elaborates on the mistrust between the Apes and the humans while The Art Desks briefly mentions how Cesar and Koba are at odds with their views on humans which initially is the cause of their war.
Many scientists believe that the physical and behavioral traits shared by all people originated from apelike ancestors. Humans evolve over million years ago to have these distinct human traits, ability to walk, a complex brain, and ability to make and use tools. Humans are closely related to primates for physical and behavioral traits. Humans and apes had a common ancestor that lived 6 million to 8 millions years ago, but humans evolve differently in Africa. Many Scientist found 15 to 20 different species of early humans. Scientist don't know how they died out, which is related, how to identify them, to classify them, and what factors made them evolve. Early humans migrated out Africa throughout all parts of the world between 1 million to 2
An apocalyptic ending has been a lingering fascination of how the world will tragically come to an end within American culture since time immemorial. The newest post-apocalyptic theory is imagining that humanity is not wiped out but a few survive, or a new generation is born to continue the human race. The science fiction nature of a post-apocalyptic world is full of decline, disaster, and tragedy in which humans have to fight for the right of survival of other creatures, such as apes, that appear to have more intelligence and better fighting abilities than man. This essay will explore the fixation of humanity on its demise and the ending of civilization through the movie and review of the film War for the Planet of the Apes. This essay will address the deep-rooted fear of humanity’s eventual demise while exploring the roots of an imagined post-apocalyptic world present through the lenses of the War for the Planet of the Apes.
Technology can be defined as a body of knowledge used to create tools, develop skills, and extract or collect materials; the application of science (the combination of the scientific method and material) to meet an objective or solve a problem. In other words the application of scientific advances to benefit humanity. It influences minds in good and bad ways, and it allows people to share information which they would otherwise not be able to attain. Even if a person does not own a computer or have credit cards, there is information on a computer somewhere about everyone. Technology itself is not being generated but a few creative minds who are innovative in nature creates technology or useful
“War for the Planet of the Apes” is a 2017 American sci-fi movie coordinated by Matt Reeves and composed by Mark Bomback and Reeves. A continuation of Rise of the Planet of the Apes (2011) and Dawn of the Planet of the Apes (2014), it is the third portion in the Planet of the Apes reboot and arrangement. The film stars Andy Serkis, Woody Harrelson, and Steve Zahn, and takes after a showdown between the chimps, drove by Caesar, and the people for control of Earth.