I saw the movie last night and it still is in my mind. How disturbed was and how great at the same time the whole story with the apes? I really loved 'Ceasar'.
The Apes will win our hearts because they are the just victims of cruel experiments and even if they are killing -- or enslaving in the later movies -- humans they are self-defencing by instinct. Even though he is obviously being hurt by human, Ceasar still attemps to stop his mates from killing those cops :( Did you gasp in the "NO!" scene?
I think it's believable for Ceasar to shout no but speaking a complete sentence clearly seems a it too far for a chimpanzee's vocal at this point. Speaking human language should happen after a few generations. I gasped at the "no" but I am a bit freaked out by "Ceasar is home."
TBH if you're committed to blogging, you might want to look around for places to put your images besides photobucket, or places that charge a minimal fee for a lot of storage. Box.net isn't free but for $10 a month you get gigabytes.
Can you answer a question that's kept me from going to this film? - is it explained how a group of maybe 150/200 creatures is able to eventually take over the world? Or is the connection to future films just implied? I keep thinking how the military would just take them out unless they were doing (BEWARE OF PUN) GorillaGuerilla warfare.
LOL. Thanks? Almost every month my journal looks like that. But it's the first time that both the bucket is crushed. I will look for another album.
It kinda explains... if you are only bothered by the ratio difference between the two populations. The genetic "evolution" starts at one champanzee, then her offspring, then a hundred maybe, then unstoppable. (Sorry it sounds confusing I am trying to be spoiler free) The military was there and tried, but it wouldn't be surpried to see the next generations of apes become smarter than human.
but so many so fast? given what we see in the film, I'd think eradication would be the desired solution - unless someone saved one and raised it, or some escaped wild and continued evolving and hiding their intelligence.
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How disturbed was and how great at the same time the whole story with the apes? I really loved 'Ceasar'.
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Even though he is obviously being hurt by human, Ceasar still attemps to stop his mates from killing those cops :(
Did you gasp in the "NO!" scene?
Reply
My heart stopped when he said that NO and in the end when he whispered about his 'home'.
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I think it's believable for Ceasar to shout no but speaking a complete sentence clearly seems a it too far for a chimpanzee's vocal at this point. Speaking human language should happen after a few generations. I gasped at the "no" but I am a bit freaked out by "Ceasar is home."
Reply
TBH if you're committed to blogging, you might want to look around for places to put your images besides photobucket, or places that charge a minimal fee for a lot of storage. Box.net isn't free but for $10 a month you get gigabytes.
Can you answer a question that's kept me from going to this film? - is it explained how a group of maybe 150/200 creatures is able to eventually take over the world? Or is the connection to future films just implied? I keep thinking how the military would just take them out unless they were doing (BEWARE OF PUN) GorillaGuerilla warfare.
Reply
It kinda explains... if you are only bothered by the ratio difference between the two populations. The genetic "evolution" starts at one champanzee, then her offspring, then a hundred maybe, then unstoppable. (Sorry it sounds confusing I am trying to be spoiler free)
The military was there and tried, but it wouldn't be surpried to see the next generations of apes become smarter than human.
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