A to Z Blogging Challenge: Movie Memories
Blogging about the movies that made an impact on my life
This was another "drive-in" movie that I watched with my family when I was a kid. I was too young to understand the "evolutionary" twist, but all those apes! And Charleton Heston was the coolest astronaut ever.
I vividly remember when the space ship landed and the female astronaut was found dead in the protective sleep shield thingy. She had aged during time travel...a crack in the shield or something. That started off one adventure after another. You hardly had time to catch your breath.
We learn that apes inhabit this strange world as superior beings while man is an uncivilized animal. Taylor (Heston) is captured and studied by scientists, Zira and Cornelius, who learn that he can talk and is far superior in intelligence than other humans. When the senate decide that Taylor is dangerous to their civilization, they want him killed, and Zira and Cornelius help him escape.
The ending was INSANE! The image of the Statue of Liberty on the beach has stayed with me my whole life. Looking back, I really think that this is one of the most dramatic visual cinematic moments in history. Considering the filmmaking techniques available in 1967, this was pretty amazing. Not just the physical image, but the truth it represents. The planet of the apes is Earth. Man destroyed his own world.
brrrr that movie really did my head in. That ending! amazing!
ReplyDeleteCreepy movie!
ReplyDeleteSylvia and Siv: Great sci-fi. It just happened to be on TV the other day so I taped it. Haven't seen it in years.
ReplyDeleteI enjoyed that movie, too- back in the day. I sometimes wish they'd do a remake with better special FX. I can hardly stand to watch their rubber mouths barely move when they talk! lol
ReplyDeleteThat's a movie that stuck with me too. It was good for back in the day!!
ReplyDeleteThat's a movie that stuck with me too. It was good for back in the day!!
ReplyDeleteI remember that movie...it was scary and amazing! They did a great job with it, for the time period~ Thanks for the walk down memory, I mean movie lane~
ReplyDeleteRae: They actually did a remake in 2001 with Mark Wahlberg. Very dark and not as good as the original, imo. Still had trouble making the apes look realistic.
ReplyDeleteKatie and Ella: As I study movies, I'm realizing more and more that art imitates life.
ReplyDeleteI remember this movie vividly. Like you, the Statue of Liberty was a big ending shocker. Great choice for a blog.
ReplyDeleteHi, Susan: Thanks for stopping by. Heston was my grandmother's favorite actor.
ReplyDeleteI remember watching this movie as a kid. I remembered nothing about it except that I really liked it. I loved monkeys. It's nice to know what it was about. Thanks for sharing.
ReplyDeleteShelley: I remember seeing old movies as a kid and not remembering much about them. If I had time, there are so many I would like to see again.
ReplyDeleteLoved the Planet of the Apes. It was a ritual to sit in and watch that when I was younger. Great P post! ;-)
ReplyDeleteTalei: Brings back memories for me, too.
ReplyDeleteI remember watching this when I was a kid. It was trippy, but I loved it. What a throw back, haha! It definitely brings back a lot of other childhood memories. It's right up there with Close Encounters.
ReplyDeleteNow you're talking! And so are the apes! Smart sci-fi always appeals to me - and this is some good smart sci-fi! It's also another movie that has a production story almost as good as the movie's - definitely recommend the making of to fans. I love all five movies - even though they teeter up and down in quality. I used to love Go Ape week on my local TV channels every year or two - all five Apes flicks airing M-F in the same time slot! Priceless! Glad you monkeyed around with this post! It's all that and a bag of chimps!
ReplyDeleteHeather: There's just something about this movie that draws you in. After this I became a huge Roddy MacDowell fan.
ReplyDeleteCraig: I'm going bananas over your ape puns. LOL.
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