don’t know when the State Administration of Radio, Film and Television has been so advanced, and adding a "quasi-screening" screen at the beginning of the film should be considered in line with international standards. However, they have added a classification screen to remind you to "check the classifications"; we are more trouble-free, we have already castrated clean for you, just rest assured. Then there appeared the opening animation of Twentieth Century Fox, and the subtitles also told you that it was a company under News Corporation. Well, it’s really a narrow road. I actually met an old friend Murdoch in the movie theater of the Celestial Dynasty. That, what monkey can’t get the palm of his hand... For the
above reasons, you can’t blame me for putting "Ape Ball" from the beginning. "Rise" is regarded as another right-wing force coming out of Hollywood. So everything seems to be meaningful. There is a group of primates that are different from "us", living a primitive life in the eyes of "us", and not speaking civilized language in the eyes of "us", and then being hunted and enslaved by "us". Later, due to the efforts/negligence/kindness of “us”, several of the “them” benefited from the advanced technology/culture of “our”, became smarter, began to yearn for a dignified life, and began to treat their own ethnic groups. / The species is dissatisfied with being oppressed. Then he/she returned to his own ethnic group, but was ostracized because he was influenced by a more advanced civilization (he actually wears pants!). But he was not afraid of hardships and brought civilization and hope to his ignorant compatriots. Of course, this civilization was stolen from "us"!
Seeing this, you already understand the sinister intentions of Hollywood's right wing! Let's take a look at the details of the film again. There are two more obvious black actors in the film. One is the big villain Jacobs, the boss of a lustful pharmaceutical company; the other is a woman on the board of a pharmaceutical company. When Caesar’s mother jumped in to scare off the directors, She is right in the middle of the picture. This is simply the most sinister technique, because you put the black man at the top of the enterprise, so no one can scold you for always letting the black man act as a servant or a small person. But, first, one of them is a hero and the other is a supporting role; second, the supporting role buddy is still a big villain! I said it would be better for you to find an Asian to act. It is more in line with the stereotype of Asians in your eyes of greed and unscrupulousness. How great is it? Speaking of this, have you noticed that there are no Asian faces in a pharmaceutical company operating in San Francisco! The producer, you are Recester. You have reached a certain point!
Then back to the plot. The most terrifying thing is not to see the shadow of the foreign race in the orangutan, but the "warning" effect of this metaphor on the white audience-these orangutans, they actually won! And the most chilling thing is that this movie is rooted in a series called Planet of the Apes, which is very popular in the West (not as good as Star Wars, but I can’t think of anything else. It can definitely be defeated), and most Western audiences know the ending: the earth is eventually ruled by apes and humans are enslaved. Therefore, behind their heads, they will think of "us" tolerating "them", which will eventually lead to the destruction of "us". The theme of "Victory of the Barbarians" has justified countless times since the Renaissance defined Rome as a civilization and German tribes as a barbarian. Then you can continue to think, and finally think all the way to what a Republican candidate said (probably) "we don't need a president who apologizes for America; we need a president who believes in America".
Fortunately, we still have the original. There are many things in the Planet of the Apes series. The movie seems to have made four or five sequels, and later there are TV series. But I still want to go back to the original book. This subject, which was nominated as a global hot topic by the Americans, originated from the novel La Planète des singes by French writer Pierre Boulle. We may not be familiar with Bühler (the translation of my own name), but you must know that one of his works-"Le Pont de la rivière Kwaï" (Le Pont de la rivière Kwaï), the film adapted from this won 1957 (? ) Oscar for Best Picture of the Year. So sometimes I wonder: How can this French novelist, who has spent most of his life traveling around Eurasia, provide Americans with such good two themes?
"The Bridge on the River Kwai" is Buhler's work in the 1940s or the 1950s. Anyway, everyone is still reflecting on the war. As a veteran of World War II, he joined the ranks of European "scar literature" (my own blind usage, This originally meant our wg). La Planète des singes is a work from the sixties-Europe in the sixties, France in the sixties! You know. This book was published in the 1960s, and I don’t think it can be suspected of being racially discriminatory, alarmist, and discordant. Maybe it is really an animal rights activist, and it really talks about the worries of "degradation" for all mankind. For the left-wing movement, we always have to reflect on the alienation of capitalist large-scale machine production. So, beware that one day you degenerate worse than monkeys!
Okay, let’s talk about the story of the book itself. It’s actually nothing. Two astronauts got something like a cosmic black box. There is a letter in it that records that the other two (three?) astronauts ran to a planet full of orangutans. The humans there are primitive and hunted by orangutans. Later, the protagonist did what the protagonist should do in all the best-selling stories-gained the trust of a few enlightened orangutans. The orangutan who helped him is not a normal orangutan (you see, even the orangutans are divided into three or six or nine grades), so they and the protagonist discovered the secret of the orangutan planet: it turns out that this planet was originally ruled by humans, but Later, they relied too much on machinery and orangutan servants, and degraded, and the orangutans turned their backs. Because of the age, the orangutans have also forgotten. (I hope I didn't confuse the three plots of the original, the original film, and the 2001 film remake, but it is really possible...)
So far, if the novel ends in this way, it will be a mess. Subsequent content has elevated the entire novel to the position of "good book" in the whole book and "classic" in science fiction works. The protagonist returned to the earth. Due to the various time and space distortions of the universe travel, it has been a long time since he returned to the earth. He found that the earth had become the same place as the planet he had been to! And the most classic place is the end: the two astronauts who looked at the black box at the beginning are actually orangutans. They don’t believe that humans have this kind of intelligence to write this kind of story, so they threw these papers as fictional novels. Lost. I was shocked when I saw this.
Oops, I found myself not only a spoiler, but also a series of episodes. Guilt, guilt. But I still want to say that the sequel "Foreshadowing" given in the film "Rise of the Apes" is too clumsy, and it makes people slap the thigh with annoyance. Originally, it made a foreshadowing of rocket lift-off and rocket disappearance, which was very good, very "very", but at the end of the film, a pilot was infected and vomited blood! Failure, failure, failure! No wonder the credit will be released after a little bit. The producer must have some concerns, right?
I wanted to interpret the ending of the novel, but it turned out that I had digressed thousands of miles, and it was spoiled with blood. never mind……
Oh, by the way, you can't forget your old business, you must mention a few words. The protagonist of the film is called Caesar, and everyone knows what it is. The rocket Icarus that lifted off was the unlucky one in the mythology of Hiero who had waxed fake wings, and ended up flying too close to the sun and falling to his death. I can't think of the other for a while, but there are a lot of Latin names in the original novel. They are French after all. Speaking of this, thinking of the black boss Jacobs (Jacobs) surname seems to be a typical Jewish surname, what does this really mean?
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