there is no sense of distance in this subject.
The confrontation between the Western world and the Muslim world;
the conflict between the two camps of socialism and capitalism;
the conquest of the people of the Central Plains by nomads in the past. . .
There are too many lessons in history.
From the point of view of humans, from the point of view of the gorilla population, neither is actually wrong.
In order to survive, for limited resources, and for the continuation of their own race, the
final confrontation is unavoidable but unavoidable.
Caesar was right, his love for mankind and his memories of the past made him easy to trust.
Koba was right, the scars he got from humans reminded him of hatred.
Caesar hopes to use trust to establish peace in exchange for mutual stability;
Koba hopes to use war to eliminate alien races to maintain the survival of his own race;
all for the sake of his homeland and for survival, but in the end Koba himself has fallen. . . .
But in a chaotic world,
Koba's reality and toughness, isn't it a way to lead the ethnic group to survive?
The style of the whole drama is so strong that it reminds me of "THE LAST OF US", the very successful survival game of the year -- it is also a story of the human race trying to survive under the doomsday crisis. . .
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