Jul 14, 2017
The idea of mankind being trapped in a world where apes have managed to evolve and turn the tables by dominating humans has proven fascinating ever since Charlton Heston made the first "Planet of the Apes" movie nearly 50 years ago. The new "War for the Planet of the Apes" caps a prequel trilogy that shows how the ape-driven society fell into place, but while it's undeniably well-made, its political and religious allegories are rather heavy-handed.
"War" begins two years after the end of the prior film, "Dawn of the Planet of the Apes," with a group of human soldiers looking for ape leader Caesar in the midst of the woods where the apes have been in hiding. After an explosive firefight leads to the apes wiping out most of the troops, Caesar spares a few captured soldiers and sends them back to their leader with the message that if they stop pursuing them, peace will reign.
Instead of agreeing, that leader – known as the Colonel and played by a menacing Woody Harrelson in an obvious homage to Marlon Brando's psychotic Col. Kurtz in "Apocalypse Now" – stages a night raid on the apes' cave that kills Caesar's wife and son. He manages to escape Caesar, who for the first time finds himself struggling with the kind of rage that made his former ape rival Koba unforgiving and evil in "Dawn."
Knowing that they must find a new, distant home now that the soldiers have found their home, Ceasar sends his colony across a desert while embarking on his own mission to find and kill the Colonel. Accompanied by three of his closest confidantes, including the thoughtful orangutan Maurice, he journeys to find the former human-quarantine camp that the Colonel has turned into a base where thousands of apes are forced into slave labor.