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    McGeary 1

    Marianne McGeary

    Dr. Nelson Hathcock

    English 434: Literature and Film

    4 May 2004

    The Year of the Ape

    Tied to his chair, his mouth covered with a cloth, Bobby Seale sat in a Chicago

    courtroom, belligerently listening to testimony on his culpability in a conspiracy. It was

    1968. The courtroom where Seale sat bound and gagged was, for three months that

    summer, the eye of a national hurricane of protesters versus the establishment. The

    Democratic convention that year attracted far more than delegates to Chicago. The

    youthful war protesters known as yippies evolved from the peace- loving hippies who

    had so entranced the nation since 1967s San Francisco Summer of Love. The yippies

    wanted more than daisy stickers and flowing robes. They wanted, they demanded, peace:

    now. Their agenda began with an end to the draft and the war in Viet Nam and spread

    out to include the Womens Liberation, Black Power, and Gay Rights movements. They

    spoke for the disenfranchised, and wore their youth as a badge of honor. They were in

    the face of the nation. They were loud, demanding, and unreasonable. Hell no! We

    wont go! they screamed at the generation of their parents, who survived the Depression;

    and the same generation who unquestioningly served in the Second World War and had

    unquestionably changed the world by doing so. This generation wanted to change the

    world as well, but by refusing to support a war they did not believe in. They were the

    best educated generation in Americas history, already known as the Baby Boomers, well

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    fed and pampered, raised on television, and used to having their say. They were anti-

    establishment, and proud of it. The whole world is watching, they said, and it was.

    Many Americans watched in fear and anger. This was the condition of the American

    psyche when the movie Planet of the Apes opened, and that is why this science fiction

    adventure film, adapted from the novel by Pierre Boulle, was raised to iconic status, and

    came to symbolize the uproar in America.

    Pierre Boulle served with the French army in Indochina in 1939 and the French

    Resistance in Malaysia before he was captured by the Japanese. As a prisoner of war,

    Boulle experienced forced labor until his escape in 1944. Boulle turned his six years in

    southeast Asia in World War II into a major work, The Bridge on the River Kwai (Le

    Pont de la Rivire Kwai) (R.J.A.C. 1). Like Graham Greene, he used the frame of an

    adventure, war or spy story to study themes of false ideals and human destructiveness

    (R.J.A.C. 5). Boulle combined in his works a captivating story with a pessimistic view of

    human endeavors and absurdities. His novel Planet of the Apes (La Plante des Singes)

    is an ironic tale about the relationship between men and animals. It transferred the basic

    relationship between the Japanese soldiers and Allied prisonersthe repression of a

    weaker group by a stronger and its moral effect on both sidesinto the distant future.

    Boulle depicts a world where humankind has lost its position as the dominant species,

    and apes rule over human savages (R.J.A.C. 5).

    Boulles Planet of the Apes is a frame story, beginning and ending with Jinn and

    Phyllis, a wealthy, leisured couple (Boulle 3), traveling through space while on

    vacation. They discover a note in a bottle floating outside the ship, and the reading of the

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    European aristocracy (Hladik 2). But on this planet, Soror, men are among the prey.

    Beaters drive the human game toward the ape hunters, who shoot the helpless men and

    women, and capture some of them in nets to be transported to labs for experimentation.

    The relationship between captors and captives is examined in the way Mrou is treated in

    the labs of the Ape society. Experiments in conditioned response are performed on the

    captives, and their mating practices are observed. The only surprising element in these

    displays was the scientific ardor with which the apes followed them, never omitting to

    make copious notes on the procedure (Boulle 112).

    Boulle also examined class systems through the roles assigned by species in the

    ape society:

    There are three distinct families, as you have noticed, each of which has

    its own characteristics: chimpanzees, gorillas, and orangutans. The racial barriers

    that used to exist have been abolished and the disputes arising from them have

    been settled thanks mainly to the campaigns launched by the chimpanzees.

    Today, in principle, there is no difference between us.

    But most of the great discoveries, I persisted, were made by the

    chimpanzees.

    That is true.

    What about the gorillas?

    They are meat eaters, she said scornfully. They were overlords and

    many of them have preserved a lust for power. They enjoy organizing and

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    McGeary 5

    directing. They love hunting and life in the open air. The poorest of them are

    engaged on work that requires physical strength.

    And the orangutans?

    Zira looked at me for a moment, then burst out laughing.

    They are Official Science, she said. You must have noticed this already

    and youll have plenty of opportunities to confirm it. They learn an enormous

    amount from books. They are all decorated. Some of them are looked upon as

    leading lights in a narrow specialized field that requires a good memory. Apart

    from that

    She made a gesture of contempt (Boulle 127-128).

    In the orangutans, Boulle demonstrated scientific close-mindedness, and the fear of a

    change in the status quo. At an archeological dig, a human baby doll is found. Mrou

    deduces that humans used to rule over Soror, but gradually allowed the apes of the planet

    to take over. The humans devolved, and the apes took dominance of the globe (R.J.A.C.

    4). Zaius, an orangutan, plots the downfall of the upstart human:

    Needless to say, the Council knows perfectly well how little that old

    fools scientific views can be trusted, but they are pretending to believe he is more

    qualified than I am to study this exceptional subject, because the latter is regarded

    as a danger to our race. They are counting on Zaius to make it impossible for him

    to do any harm (Boulle 255).

    The orangutans hate you because you are the living proof of their

    scientific aberrations, and the gorillas consider you too dangerous to be allowed at

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    liberty much longer. They are frightened you might found a new race on this

    planet. But apart from this eventuality, they are frightened that your mere example

    might sow unrest among the men (Boulle 256).

    The idea for a movie version of Boulles book was relentlessly promoted by the

    producer, Arthur P. Jacobs, who came up with the original concept (Nichols 1). Jacobs

    saw in the book a compelling, original, and visually exciting film. Hollywood, however,

    found the idea of costumed apes uncomfortably close to Saturday-morning cartoons.

    Only Richard D. Zanuck, the head of 20

    th

    Century Fox, was willing to make the film:

    We chose it strictly for its entertainment value. It was something that

    wed never seen before. I didnt read any kind of message. I saw it as an

    interesting, unique piece. The later films got into message, but I wasnt trying to

    make a statement (Nichols 2).

    The script was co-written by Michael Wilson and Rod Serling. Wilson, a

    screenwriter who was blacklisted during the 1950s, ghost-wrote the script forRiver

    Kwai. Serling became a genre legend as the creator, host and principal writer of TVs

    landmarkThe Twilight Zone (1959-63). After that shows cancellation, Serling began to

    take on film script work, delivering works with strong and ardent political views. The

    early scenes in the film with Charlton Heston delivering a series of lengthily embittered

    comments on the human condition are pure Serling (Scheib 1).

    Among the major issues that drove the 1968 film was nuclear proliferation, and

    mans escalating violence (McEver 3). In the film, Mrou is called Taylor, and he is so

    fed up with humanity that he opts for a space mission that endures for years (McEver 3).

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    A harsh, bitter man, Taylor is a refugee from a human society he suspects has long ago

    destroyed itself with hate and nuclear warfare (Nichols 2).

    Hes a misanthrope, said Heston in an interview. Hes disgusted with life and

    the human race. In the famous last scene, with a twist worthy ofThe Twilight Zone

    (Endelman 3), a half-buried Statue of Liberty not only reveals what planet Taylor has

    crashed on, but what fate it suffered hundreds of years earlier (Nichols 2).

    You maniacs! You blew it up! Damn you! Goddamn you all to hell! screams

    Taylor as he falls in the sand in horror at what his contemporaries have done (Planet of

    the Apes). Mans violent nature seems to have caused the present conditions on the

    planet; that is, that apes rule.

    Wilsons experience testifying before the McCarthy commission inspired the trial

    scene in the film. Taylor is naked, bound, and not allowed to defend himself. His

    accusers smugly judge him guilty until proven innocent.

    Taylor argues that Zaius dual positions as Chief Defender of the Faith and the

    Minister of Science have given him the dangerous power to dictate however he sees fit.

    Like the Catholic Church before the Age of Enlightenment, Dr. Zaius vehemently

    enforces the laws of the Holy Scrolls, and dismisses the observations of science (Meyer

    2).

    There is a greater truth that seems to intrigue both Zaius and Taylor. Zaius fears

    this unknown Truth, afraid that it will shatter all that he believes in. Taylor, on the other

    hand, has nothing to believe in anymore. He took the space flight to explore the

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    possibility that somewhere in the universe, there must be something better than man

    (qtd. in Meyer 2).

    When the film opened, the public was acutely aware that some of the action

    seemed to reflect the images they saw on the nightly news: people getting hosed down on

    the street, people being beaten (Meyer 1), and a man restrained with ropes at his own

    trial.

    Planet of the Apes depicts an upside-down worlda brutal, primal place where

    apes are in charge and humans scavenge for subsistence, hunted and enslaved by the

    tyrannical primates. The sudden appearance of one man, alien to the present order and

    unaffected by its oppression, serves as a challenge to the status quo and a catalyst for

    revolutionary social change (McEver 2). Several revolutions were well underway in

    America in 1968. The Youth Movement contained a variety of movements: war

    protesters, Black Power, the Womens Liberation Front, and the demand for gay rights.

    Heston, one of the most powerful and influential actors in the world at the time,

    was wooed by Jacobs just as producers today woo stars like Tom Cruise or Russell

    Crowe. According to Eric Greene, author ofPlanet of the Apes as American Myth,Race,

    Politics, and Popular Culture, it was no coincidence that Heston a film icon of white

    heroic strength and Western indomitability (qtd. in Browne 1) was cast in the role of

    Taylor. But Greene has put the cart before the horse. Heston was cast by Jacobs in order

    to ensure that other name stars as well as a big studio would be attracted to the project

    (Planet of the Apes Disc 2). He was not placed in the film as a symbol of white strength.

    He took the lead role, and in that role, came to symbolize the American upstart. Taylors

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    politics during the volatile historical period of their original production and reception

    (Creekmur 1). Bring the war home! was the slogan of the Weathermen, a group

    devoted to the violent overthrow of the American government, and as the Vietnam War

    escalated, eachApe film became more violent. The films continued to speak for the

    disenfranchised and enjoyed wide appeal.

    Today, films are sometimes planned with sequels. Successful film series such as

    The Matrix, The Lord of the Rings, and Kill Bill were filmed continuously, including

    sequels. Planet of the Apes was not. The film was planned and filmed as a complete

    work. Because of the turmoil of the times, the public saw Planet of the Apes as an

    allegory. Taylor was the symbol of rebellion in all its forms. It was the succeedingApes

    movies that were truly a mirror of the times.

    When discussing the fidelity of an adaptation, one question should be: to what

    extent has a different historical or cultural context altered the original (Corrigan 20)? The

    filmmakers planned only an exciting science fiction film, and did succeed in reviving the

    genre, but the immense success enjoyed by the story itself was due to the time and place

    in which it premiered.

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    Works Cited

    Aushenker, Michael. "Apes as Allegory." The Jewish Journal 2004. 26 Apr. 2004

    .

    Boulle, Pierre. Planet of the Apes. New York: The Ballantine Group, 1963. 1-268.

    Browne,David. "Monkeyshines, No joke: 'Planet of the Apes' teems with political

    subtexts." Entertainment Weekly 26 Apr. 1996. 26 Apr. 2004 .

    Corrigan, Timothy. Film and Literature, An Introduction and Reader. Upper Saddle

    River, New Jersey: Prentice Hall, 1999.

    Creekmur, Corey K. Monkeybusiness. Science Fiction Studies Nov. 2000 Vol. 27,

    Part 3.

    Endelman, Michael . "Still Going Ape Tim Buton's Remake Will Find There's a Cult

    Following in Place." Boston Globe 22 July 2001, Third ed., sec. L: 7. ProQuest.

    30 Apr. 2004. Keyword: Planet of the Apes.

    Greene, Eric. Planet of the Apes as American Myth Race, Politics, and Popular Culture.

    New England: Wesleyan UP, 1996.

    Hladik, Tamara I. "Planet of the Apes." Classic Sci-Fi 1998. 26 Apr. 2004

    .

    Mackie, Rob . "The ape man." The Guardian 3 Aug. 2001. 26 Apr. 2004

    .

    McEver, Matt. Hollywood Jesus. 28 July 2001. 26 Apr. 2004

    .

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    Nichols, Peter M. "Film; In a Social Mirror, The Faces of Apes." The New York Times

    30 Aug. 1998, Late ed., sec. 2: 22-22. America Online. 27 Apr. 2004

    Planet of the Apes. Dir. Franklin J. Schaffner. Perf. Charlton Heston, Roddy McDowell,

    Kim Hunter, and Maurice Evans. DVD. 20th

    Century Fox, 1968.

    R.J.A.C., . Tim Burton's Planet of the Apes, The Visitor. 30 Apr. 2004

    .

    Scheib,Richard. The Science Fiction, Horror and Fantasy Film Review. 1991. 26 Apr.

    2004 .

    The Who. My Generation By Pete Townsend. Rec. Dec. 1965. My Generation.

    Brunswick, 1965.