IS PLANET OF THE APES GETTING REBOOTED AGAIN?
- By Devin Faraci
- Published 10/31/2008
- News

Tim Burton killed Planet of the Apes. His film, while technically profitable, left moviegoers with such a bad taste in their mouths that Fox never bothered revisiting it in a sequel. The franchise, which had seemed poised for rebirth, lay dead for years.
But right now, in the halls of Fox, there is another new version of Planet of the Apes that has been kicking around for the last year. It's not a sequel to the Burton film, and it's not another remake of the original. To the general audience it's a prequel to Planet of the Apes, but for the initiated it's something totally different.
It's a remake of Conquest of the Planet of the Apes.
Yup. It's the story of Caesar, the ape who said no, the first ape with speech who started the events that led to a world where monkeys were on top and humans were dumb beasts.
Things are different in this script, written by Rick Jaffa and Amanda Silver, which is called Genesis: Apes. Fans will know that Caesar in Conquest is the result of a massive temporal paradox - his parents escaped to 1973 from a far future Earth. Further, Conquest takes place in a dystopian 'future' - 1991 - while Genesis: Apes is set in the modern day.
In this version Caesar is the result of a genetic scientist fooling around with the nature of things. When the baby monkey exhibits intelligence and the ability to talk, he takes the cuddly thing home to his wife, who is unable to bear children. Things go surprisingly well for a number of years until Caesar grows up and sees mommy getting attacked. The dutiful son steps in and accidentally kills the attacker.
Here's where it takes off. In a scene paralleling Charlton Heston in the cage in the original Planet of the Apes, Caesar ends up in custody at an Ape Conservatory where he and the other apes are abused mercilessly. Caesar finds himself a primate without a world - he's as smart as humans but will never be one of them (and is in fact tortured by them) and he's initially rejected by his monkey brethren.
You're on Caesar's side, understanding where this poor outcast is coming from. But then the script gets really ballsy and, just like in Conquest, Caesar begins a campaign to unite the apes and overthrow human society. And his plan isn't a Martin Luther King Jr series of marches, speeches and sit ins - Caesar and his apes take to the streets violently.
Again, it's like Conquest of the Planet of the Apes, which brilliantly modeled its ape riot scenes on the Watts Riots that had happened just a few years before. But Conquest was set in a future where America was ruled by a fascist society. Genesis: Apes is set today, in this world. The regime that Caesar overthew in Conquest was made up of bad guys. The Caesar of Genesis: Apes is coming after you.
Maybe this is why the script has been languishing all this time. You just can't have your hero working to tear down our modern society. It's too radical! Plus, Fox remains notoriously unfriendly to good genre ideas.
Still, imagine if the film had come out this year. It's the 40th anniversary of Planet of the Apes and The Dark Knight proved that mainstream audiences are ready for something edgy and challenging. The country is polarized politically in a way that would almost guarantee this film major media coverage and controversy, which would sell tickets. You could probably have liberals and conservatives, whites and minorities completely outraged by this movie.
And it's the perfect way to get the franchise back up and running. Everybody knows that the Planet of the Apes used to be Earth. Everybody knows that the mute humans are our distant descendants. Everybody knows the Statue of Liberty is buried in the sand. So just skip all that - get to something new. That was one of the major problems with the Burton version, that it tried to recapture the shock of the original, the most spoiled movie of all time. But Genesis: Apes lets us get back into this world of apes and do what the four sequels to the original did - craft great science fiction parables that had gut puncher endings. Only Planet of the Apes had a 'twist' ending; all of the others just had 'Holy shit!' finales.
It's likely that Genesis: Apes will sit on a shelf forever and ever, but here's hoping that somebody at Fox is paying attention and realizes that even Mark Wahlberg can't keep this franchise down forever.
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Comments
Comment #1 (Posted by Rob)
There's a guy I know who said Tim Burton's version was far better than the original. I think he was judging the film based solely on the SPFX.
Comment #2 (Posted by an unknown user)
Monkeys as metaphor for black people? Interesting. And is it really fair to call the 2001 movie Tim Burton's? He didn't develop it - he just jumped at a ready-to-go studio script after being dicked around on Superman for over a year.
Comment #3 (Posted by atinyspeckofdust)
This sounds awesome. The biggest hole, however, (beyond the talking ape part which we're already on board with) is how the hell does he get a bunch of Apes to actually form a formidable threat to overthrow the world in this day and age? Greenpeace would surely be on his side, but they can't do much. Cesar needs guns. Lots of guns. And gymnastics. And an airbourne virus. Perhaps he gets in with the test monkeys at the center for disease control...?
Comment #4 (Posted by Burt Reynolds)
Don't make excuses for Tim Burton. He filmed it, he sat in the editing room, he knew what he was releasing, and he kept his name on it anyways.
This "Genesis" thing sounds interesting, though. Too bad it'll be stuck forever at Fox. We could really use some good sci-fi with something to say.
Comment #5 (Posted by Grammer Nazi)
Actually, we would be the mute human's ancestors.
Usually I hate remakes of good movies, but this idea has potential.
Comment #6 (Posted by Spelling Nazi)
It's spelled grammar.
Comment #7 (Posted by skip)
I think the bigger news is that the screenwriters of "Eye for an Eye" and "Relic" are still working.
Comment #8 (Posted by Bossy Boots)
I think the most spoiled film of all time is Soylent Green. Planet of the Apes is way up on the list, but Soylent Green's major spoiler is a four word phrase with the title of the movie in the phrase. I was just talking to someone the other day and she knew the line "Soylent Green is people" but had no idea that it was even a movie!
Also, I like the idea of remaking Conquest of the Planet of the Apes. Hope it makes it through development intact.
Comment #9 (Posted by SOrking)
The BBc already made this! It was called First Born, starred Charles Dance, and it was both crackers and brilliant.
Comment #10 (Posted by Mark Wahlberg)
Hi, Devin! You review movies? I produce "Entourage"! Say hi to your mother for me, allright?
Comment #11 (Posted by GABRIEL GRAY)
DEVIN OBVIOUSLY GOT HIS COPY OF THE ULTIMATE FANWANK PLANET OF THE APES TIMELINE. ENOUGH WITH THE FUCKING APES ALREADY. THERE ARE ONLY 2 MOVIES I WANT TO HEAR ABOUT... WATCHMEN and more importantly AVATAR. NOW GET BACK TO JUDGEING OTHER PEOPLES WORK (badly)
Comment #12 (Posted by an unknown user)
Tim Burton killed Planet of the Apes? Sorry, I thought it was the shitty Battle For the Planet of the Apes that killed the franchise. Or maybe it was the shitty tv show that came out. Devin, go fuck yourself. Planet of the Apes was a good Twilight Zone episode AT BEST.
Comment #13 (Posted by an unknown user)
Haha! This script making it through fox intact with its idea's and integrity? Fat chance. Tom Rothman runs fox, people. The script actually sounds decent but it wont get made in its current form at fox.
Comment #14 (Posted by joey cash)
No. Planet of the Apes is the most spoiled movie of all time because everybody knows that movie. I've never even heard of Soylent Green.
Comment #15 (Posted by fatone)
I liked burtons movie. the fx and makeup were great, and a sequel that continues the story right where the last one ends would have ruled. viewed on its own, it really isn't as bad as everyone says it is. the original ones are tired and dated. flame away.
Comment #16 (Posted by Apeshit)
If they redo the Apes films, they should do them with all the apes being the same height as Chimps, so the whole Ape world isn't even human scaled. Like a horse or ox would feel in our living environments. And really have the apes laying the smackdown on unruly humans with the vigor of a real chimp cracking the shits.
Comment #17 (Posted by Christopher)
This i s a great idea and one which the comic series Revolution of the Apes expanded upon to great effect.
Comment #18 (Posted by batfunk)
No more Apes films please! Have American screenwriters all developed Repetitive Compulsive Disorder and somehow can't manage to move onto something new? Get a life and read a book.
Comment #19 (Posted by Chill out, #12)
#12, what the hell is wrong with you, telling someone to go fuck themselves just because you disagree with them over something as trivial as a movie? Are you THAT socially inept and unable to communicate like an adult? For crying out loud, man--get some therapy.
Comment #20 (Posted by Borgia)
CHUD didn't break this news. ProdductionWeekly.com reported it back in August--it's just that people didn't pick up the news until CHUD ram their report this week. It's actually been known for two months.
Comment #21 (Posted by Gerry)
Reboot = SUX
There are 100,000 stories (GOOD STUFF) sitting on the sci-fi shelves that NEED to be made.
PLEASE don't throw away your $$$ at junky reboots.....
Comment #22 (Posted by Miller)
I guess I'm the only one that enjoyed Burton's. I'm not a fan of the original franchise, it's slow, plodding and just generally dull. Not much happens. In the new one it at least had some action and some entertaining and threatening characters.
Comment #23 (Posted by bully boy)
Chimps are APES! Not Monkeys!
Comment #24 (Posted by Bim Turdton)
Stop the planet of the apes.... I want to get off.
Comment #25 (Posted by Da Vinci)
For a Reboot, I suggest you read the original story by Pierre Boule... But, that's just a suggestion!
Comment #26 (Posted by thatguy)
Citizen Kane is the most spoiled movie of all time. I loved the Planet Of The Apes movie series as a kid, and it was a pretty strong franchise, but it has aged terribly. The ideas and stories are still great, but the effects are too dated. The whole franchise needs a reboot. Burton's remake was terrible. Having all the humans be able to talk totally removes what makes the astronaut special. That film showed a complete misunderstanding of what made Planet Of The Apes such an enjoyable story. This proposed remake actually sounds good. Hopefully they will plot it out so they can make four or five more sequels and do as much with the franchise as possible.
Comment #27 (Posted by an unknown user)
Chalk up another vote for Burton's Apes. Without taking the originals into consideration it was a decent and entertaining movie and I thought it had a great twist ending. When I saw that ending I was looking forward to a continuation. The originals were good in their own right, but Burton's remake was also good.
Comment #28 (Posted by Dr Zaius)
Planet of the Apes was a prophecy fulfilled movie. Just look at the state of the world today with a chimp as leader of the free world.
Comment #29 (Posted by Batmite79)
"For a Reboot, I suggest you read the original story by Pierre Boule... But, that's just a suggestion!"
Much as I love the novel, it would make for a terrible movie. It's not something I could see being translated at all.
Comment #30 (Posted by Matt)
Burton was not better than the original. But it was enjoyable if you ever read the book. Burton's version was faithful to the tone and Swiftian satire of the book.
Comment #31 (Posted by Dennis)
Why not take up the story AFTER Battle for the Planet of the Apes? If you look at it, it's the second, altered timeline. You can take it anywhere you want to go.
Comment #32 (Posted by Mossadon)
I too recommend Boule's original book to read AND as a great place to start with re vamping the franchise!
I LOVE Burton, I HATE his Ape($hit) film!
Th ending was the only good thing about it...and that's because it's a reference to Boule's original story!
And Hollywood, like someone else said, read a book, make a *GASP!* NEW FILM!
Comment #33 (Posted by Ceasar)
The Apes have to look like the original Planet of the Apes look to succeed.The 2001 Apes did not look like the originals and that partly killed it.We all know how the Apes look and that look is what kept them alive and what the fans love.Planet of the Apes is not just the 5 stories,its the look of the apes from the films that was so original.People who make remakes change the look too much and it ruins the picture.
Comment #34 (Posted by Jose Figueroa)
"Beneath" was a worthy follow up to "Planet". No "monkeys" do not "represent blacks", the message is bigger than that. It is the timeless struggle of humanity for the freedom to live and to think. Both Ape City and 1991 America are fascist and either humans or apes, respectively, are at the bottom of the social order.
Comment #35 (Posted by Dave Death)
Get Sean Penn and Warren Beatty on board with some funding, it could work.
Conquest has been begging for this kind of reworking. Hope studios don't water it down, but I guess that's too much to ask
Comment #36 (Posted by Rich Handley)
I'm not keen on the idea of a remake of Conquest. Not only did the Tim Burton remake disappoint, but all prior attempts at a reboot ended up producing lousy scripts. You can find several of them online--they're pretty ridiculous.
Rich Handley
Timeline of the Planet of the Apes
NOW AVAILABLE:
http://www.hassleinbooks.com
info@hassleinbooks.com
Comment #37 (Posted by splashpont)
Movies with a message, in the spirit of Twilight Zone. A new "Apes" movie? Sure, if it does what the earlier ones did best: run a social commentary to mirror in sci-fi what we may not otherwise see as the reality.
Comment #38 (Posted by Peter Martin)
Funny -- Tom Rothman was just on Fox Movie Channel after their showing of the original PLANET, talking up the power of the original, pointing out that the remake made $360 million worldwide, admitting that the remake's ending wasn't as good as the original, and discussing the prequel script in general terms (though adding that it might not get made while he's still around).
Comment #39 (Posted by Joe Russo)
I received my copy of Handley's Planet of the Apes timeline book today, and it's BRILLIANT. It's exactly what every Planet of the Apes fan could ever hope for--far more than I expected--and I highly recommend everyone go out and buy it NOW.
Comment #40 (Posted by JoJo)
If they go with this Genesis: Apes idea by placing the story in present time, how are they going to explain 6 foot tall chimpanzees?
In this current day and age chimps are small like children.
Or is Caesar going to be the only six foot chimp leading all normal looking (meaning small) chimps and other normal looking apes to a war on humanity?

