Tag: Movies

  • Planet of the Apes

    Extraordinary
    Adventure
    94

    What would it be like it if you weren’t the most dominant species on the planet?  You might be hunted for food, domesticated as a household pet, or experimented on by cosmetic companies.  And how bad would you feel if those excruciating make-up tests still made people look like this?:

    Welcome to the Planet of the Apes, where the above is actually considered fantastic make-up.  In the bizarro world of Hollywood, they actually give you honorary Oscars for that, which is strange, since at first blush, Planet of the Apes doesn’t look like Oscar material.  It’s a movie with a bunch of actors dressed up as monkeys, imprisoning other actors dressed up like idiot humans (insert your own actor joke).  And yet 40 years later, the movie is a hallmark of American cinema, enshrined by the Library of Congress, honored as having one of the best film scores by the AFI, and quoted by millions of people every day who want to call their boss a “dirty ape.”

    Apes are actually quite fastidious.

    The movie begins several thousand years in the future, with a group of astronauts crash landing on a planet.  This happens with some frequency in sci-fi stories.  Contrary to The Right Stuff, fiction writers believe that astronauts are actually among the universe’s worst pilots.  They never simply land on the planet.  They always crash.

    Also common in sci-fi stories are planets that are well suited for human living, and the Planet of the Apes is no different.  The oxygen is breathable, the soil is found to produce vegetation, etc.  In fact, there are already humans living on the planet, though they are mute, feral, and quite fetching in their little buckskin miniskirts.

    Meow.

    Like all good Twilight Zone episodes (the first draft of Planet of the Apes was written by Rod Serling), this is a story where the hero is the same and everyone else is different.  The hero is, of course, Charlton Heston, playing the part of the incompetent astronaut pilot who is immediately captured by great desert warriors.  I don’t want to spoil anything for you, but the humans are not the planet’s dominant species.

    Give up? It's the armadillos!

    On this planet,  it is the apes that enslave the humans, and they’re pretty mean about it, so shut your trap, Jane Goodall.  The apes are quite surprised to find that one of their new captives can read and write, and even more surprised to find that he once went to flight school.  They want to keep this smart human quiet so as not to disrupt the ape supremacy thing that they’ve got going.  They have many methods for doing this, such as hitting him in the throat, locking him in a cage, and sentencing him to castration.  But along the way, Charlton (whose character is named Taylor) befriends some orangutan scientists (as well as the pretty gal in the next cell) and sets off to discover the true history of the planet.

    "Uh, I think I'd prefer the cosmetic testing."

    There is the obligatory chase scene, the showdown, the saving of the bad guy’s life, the return of the favor, and of course the discovery that humans were once dominant, but have fallen by the wayside, presumably because they did not scratch their armpits enough.

    The big finale contains one final shock, in which we find out that Rosebud was actually the name of Bruce Willis’s ghost (just kidding!  That ending would make no sense!).  Everyone on Earth knows this spoiler by now, but just in case you’re a monkey who only recently crash landed on our planet, I’ll let you in on the big twist.

    When trapped in quicksand, raise one arm while keeping the other close to your chest.

    The planet of the apes is actually Earth.  We know this because Charlton Heston stumbles onto the ruin of the Statue of Liberty lying on the beach (remember, it’s several thousand years in the future).  First time audience members always gasp in shock, partly because we don’t like the idea of Bubbles the Chimp running for Congress, but also because Taylor is apparently such a bad pilot that instead of exploring new solar systems, he flew in a giant circle before crashing our tax dollars into the desert.

    One has to admit that Bubbles is five times less creepy in this pose than Emmanuel Lewis.

    Next up, #93!

  • On Adventure

    If you’re like me you’ve probably been sitting around this past week pondering two words that captured your imagination when you were just a kid. Obviously, those two words were “adventure” and “extraordinary” and you probably remember the time when you realized that “extraordinary” should come before “adventure” so as to form a somewhat sensible phrase: “Extraordinary Adventure.”

    After that you probably got caught up in little side tangents such as capitalization for effect. If you’re not like me, then perhaps you might now very well be pondering one word: Why?

    Before I answer that let me get to my favorite part of blogging: Definitions!

    Webster defines the word “adventure” as:

    Actually I am pretty sure you know what adventure is already so I decided not to look at what its actual definition was. Instead I just brainstormed things that seemed adventure-y to me. Here’s a short list.

    • Sailboats – sailboats count as adventure because they are daring, exploratory, and sometimes pirates and/or captains can be found on them (especially in the 15th-18th centuries).  Also they have many different ways of tying a rope. The essence of adventure.
    Adventure stays crunchy even in milk
    • Sword Fights – Let’s see … possibility of death? Check. Single combat warriors? Check. Lightsabers? Double check. This is a no brainer. Sword fights are definitely in. Don’t pretend like you didn’t make the “ting” “clang” noises when you were younger either.
    A touch! A touch! I do confess it!
    • Airplanes. Flying — especially fast flying — is dangerous and romantic. Couple that with shooting and being shot at and you have yourself a good recipe for adventure. Airplanes are even cooler when they fly over the desert.
    No. Desert.
    • Rock climbing, jail breaking, wind surfing, mountain climbing, horseback riding, whitewater rafting, and meeting the in-laws all count as adventure. But what is the greatest adventure of them all? That’s right. Story.

    I also capitalized the word Story here in order to differentiate it from the lowercase “story” which I left uncapitalized. Otherwise there is basically no difference.  Why is Story the greatest adventure? Because with Story, you are able to have all these adventures without having to take years and years learning how to not die while performing them.

    Certainly I do not advocate sitting around watching TV instead of actually DOING something adventurous, but seeing as it is almost impossible to die from watching TV, it can sometimes be a better choice. Plus, when are you going to have the time to do all of the things one could possibly classify as adventure in one lifetime? Story is the next best thing.

    Story introduces the element of imagination.  All you have to do is hear Azeem say to Robin Hood: “Your horse is lame, mine carries two,” And instantly, maybe even without riding a horse, you kind of understand the adventure of horseback riding.

    Also Story is easier to access than most of the other things you might list as adventure. No matter the medium — poetry, prose, film, comics, video games, even history and board games — Stories are easily more obtainable than scuba certification.

    Coming up in the next several months we will explore what makes some Stories into Extraordinary Adventures, and because this is the Internet (which is capitalized because spell check told me to), we have decided to do it in list form. We will give you 100 major examples of adventures. They will be presented in descending order starting with 100 and working backwards all the way to the number one Most Extraordinary Adventure Story (in any medium).

    We invite you to check back often to see the list as it develops. Remember there are a hundred of these and they’re going in REVERSE order so that means that the series will just keep getting better. Meaning, no matter when you check back, it will always be on our best day. So there’s a little motivation for you.

    Next up: the 100th most Extraordinary Adventure. Stay tuned.