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Rise of the Planet of the Apes

2011 · Directed by Rupert Wyatt

🧘8

Woke Score

68

Critic

🍿78

Audience

Ultra Based

Critics rated this 60 points above its woke score. Among Ultra Based films, this critic score ranks #679 of 1469.

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Synopsis

A highly intelligent chimpanzee named Caesar has been living a peaceful suburban life ever since he was born. But when he gets taken to a cruel primate facility, Caesar decides to revolt against those who have harmed him.

Consciousness Assessment

Rise of the Planet of the Apes is a competent summer blockbuster that happens to contain serious ethical concerns about animal exploitation and corporate malfeasance. The film presents these themes with genuine conviction, depicting primate testing facilities with appropriate grimness and allowing Caesar's uprising to function as justified rebellion against systemic cruelty. Yet the film's moral framework is fundamentally humanitarian rather than aligned with contemporary progressive sensibilities. Its critique of corporate exploitation and animal suffering belongs to a longer tradition of ethical filmmaking that predates our current cultural moment by decades. The film is earnest, never cynical, but also never feels compelled to comment upon the social hierarchies or identity dynamics that would preoccupy modern cinema. James Franco delivers a workmanlike performance as a scientist whose moral awakening drives the narrative forward. The motion capture technology, then cutting-edge, renders Caesar as a sympathetic protagonist whose intelligence and emotional depth invite genuine identification. This technical achievement allows the film to sidestep certain uncomplicated animal representation questions, though such considerations were scarcely on anyone's mind in 2011. What we have here is a pre-woke film engaging with pre-woke ethical concerns, executed with sufficient craft to remain engaging fourteen years later.

Analysis generated by our Consciousness Algorithm

Critic Reviews

68%from 39 reviews
New York Daily News100

This summer's best popcorn flick.

Joe NeumaierRead Full Review →
Time100

As both a simian simile and a wonder of technology, Rise of the Planet of the Apes deserves to be in the company of the great original "Kong." This year's sixth "origins" story of a fantasy franchise (after The Green Hornet, Thor, X-Men: First Class, Green Lantern and Captain America: The First Avenger) is also the year's finest action movie.

Richard CorlissRead Full Review →
Wall Street Journal90

Judged, though, as the action extravaganza it means to be, Rise of the Planet of the Apes wins high marks for originality, and takes top honors for spectacle.

Joe MorgensternRead Full Review →
Austin Chronicle40

Hell, even Heston's performance elicited cheers back in the day. Franco, in a totally, tonally different role, but still the prime human here, is a pale shadow of the ruined future to come.

Marc SavlovRead Full Review →