Lament

Jean 2022-03-19 09:01:02

Said it was a lament because my friend cried after watching this film.
Silently accompanied him to sit for a while on the steps in front of the theater. He said how loyal animals are. He has always wanted to raise an animal, and the feelings of animals are really different. I want to jokingly ask him if he has any shadow on people... Later, I still held back. It would seem that I was too cold-blooded, but like a bad person.

Most of the time, tears are not necessarily related to movies, but to emotions. The comments are even more emotional. I said that I prefer to look at film reviews and book reviews that are objective and objective, and I probably can't do it myself. Seeing movies about animal experiments, hunting and killing, etc. are always heart palpitations. As a member of the food chain, I can't help but feel sad.

Everything is anim.
This may be too broad to say, but it is also real. Spirituality is not a concept drawn from subjective consciousness. Rather, they are all creatures in this world, and they make certain feelings related to us through media such as eyes, facial expressions, and even swaying movements. The brain can receive, but cannot analyze the mental resonance. Of course, what is said in the movie is not just about spirituality, animality and humanity. It focuses more on the side effects brought about by pharmaceutical technology. Regarding the film that uses medicine as the starting point, there was a "Limitless" not long ago, which was also good. Coincidentally, the effect of the two tablets is to improve IQ, but the never-ending NZT tablet is very effective for humans, and the No. 113 drug in this tablet can only improve the IQ of orangutans, but it is for humans. Can evaporate infectious virus. Whether it is effective or harmful, the ending is intended to warn people that they should be cautious about the natural physiology and the potential of the human brain.

Okay, back to the movie.
In the whole film, there are long shots, San Francisco city scenes, and facial capture techniques worthy of praise. Outside of the film, the gorillas are naturally biased, and humans are completely responsible for themselves. However, if in reality, there are really a group of orangutans who ran out of the zoo with well-developed limbs and smart brains, showing human eyes, and they could speak English. They would probably be scared to call the police right away.

At the beginning of the story, Caesar's mother was so angry that she was shot to protect it. It inherited the mother's code-named 112 drug gene, and grew into a new generation of orangutans with high IQ. It will step on the shoulders of mankind in a fatalistic manner and use human high-tech drugs to lead the orangutans around the world on the road to freedom and prosperity.
Of course, this road is also destined to not be so easy. The first thing Caesar should restrain is the love and dependence on human beings. In the Primate Control Center, facing Tom's ineffective bad administrator and the owner's helplessness, Caesar broke out in humiliation and disappointment with humans. It wiped away the symbolic home window painted on the wall of the cage. It decides to liberate itself, liberate its kind.
Human greed makes medicines beyond the scope of human control; human medicines give other animals the ability to change the world. The effect of drug No. 113 is revealed without haste, and while scraping away the code of human destiny, it improves the IQ of the orangutan.

Wisdom changes destiny. Emotions cannot resolve misunderstandings. What is missed cannot be recovered.

Since Caesar erased his own painting, he is no longer the smart little orangutan who grew up with the scientist, an experimental product, and a strange playmate. It is itself, it returns to the same kind, it is Emperor Caesar, it is freedom.

At the end of the film, the scientist kept saying that he should protect Caesar and let Caesar return to the house where he lived since childhood. But Caesar has nothing else to say. What should have happened has happened, and what shouldn’t have happened has happened. It says "Caesar is home". The

pursuit of freedom, equality, love and home.

In this world, no matter whether people or animals, different routes lead to the same goal. Before being broken down by microorganisms, we struggled to pursue it. However, this idea, from a historical perspective, is just a sad song.

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Extended Reading
  • Jaden 2022-03-25 09:01:05

    When the orangutan uprising escaped from the management office, the people in the back asked for a sentence. This will be the site of a meeting from now on. . It turns out that Caesar is old Mao

  • Jaden 2022-04-24 07:01:01

    Four and a half stars, a soft sci-fi masterpiece from the director of "Prison Break"! Solid, brilliant, the special effects are flawless, and the motion capture technology is amazing. The scene from ape to hostage is extremely explosive, and the details of the whole film are very anthropological, which are worth pondering and reflecting. In the street fighting stage, the ape tribe relied on cold weapons to have an absolute advantage over humans, and the final decisive battle was dazzling and hot, and it was done in one go.

Rise of the Planet of the Apes quotes

  • [first lines]

    Robert Franklin: [administering chimp intelligence test] Okay, okay. Here you go. And let's go again.

    [gives Bright Eyes treat and clocks timer]

    Will Rodman: Which one's this? Number nine?

    Robert Franklin: Yeah, this is number nine. Bright Eyes, we call her. Are you watching this? This is unbelievable.

    [Bright Eyes does the tower fast]

    Robert Franklin: Oh, my God. Oh, my God.

    Bright Eyes: [grabs treat and eats it]

    Will Rodman: How many moves was that?

    Robert Franklin: 20.

    [Will looks at them and starts to head out]

    Robert Franklin: Yeah, a perfect score is 15. Doc, what are you giving her?

    Will Rodman: [heads out] Hey, give that video!

    [runs out the hallway and opens the door to Steven Jacobs' office]

    Will Rodman: Chimp number nine, just one dose.

    Steven Jacobs: [looks at Will and holds a phone down] Aren't I seeing you later?

    Will Rodman: [puts file on desk] We're good to go.

    Steven Jacobs: I'm going to call you back. Yeah, all right. Thanks. Bye.

    Will Rodman: The 112. It works.

    [walks to a large screen]

    Steven Jacobs: On just the one primate.

    Will Rodman: One is all we need. Full cognitive recorvery. We're ready.

    Steven Jacobs: Look are you sure you're not rushing this?

    Will Rodman: I've been working on this for five and a half years. The data is clear. We're ready, Steven. All I need is your approval for human trials.

    Steven Jacobs: For this, you're going to need the board's approval. There's alot of money riding on this, Will. You only get one shot.

    Will Rodman: One shot is all I need.

    Steven Jacobs: [sighing] All right. But I'll need to see all the research.

    Will Rodman: [bangs on the desk] You got it.

    Steven Jacobs: And, Will...

    Will Rodman: Yeah?

    Steven Jacobs: Keep your personal emotions out of it. These people invest in results, not dreams.

    Will Rodman: Okay.

    [leaves office]

  • Caroline Aranha: I love chimpanzees. I'm also afraid of them. And it's appropriate to be afraid of them.