It’s another bummer of a weekend at the summer of box office, where overall domestic revenue looks to be down 69 percent — no, not a typo — from a year ago as Hollywood and theater owners continue to grapple with a lack of big event pics. And year-to-date revenue is now down 24 percent […]
Kingdom Of The Planet Of The Apes did better than industry’s conservative estimates as it grossed around 129 million dollars in its debut weekend. With the way the advances were moving, there was a chance that the new Planet Of The Apes film would end up with underwhelming results but that was not to be the case. It has secured the second biggest opening weekend for a Planet Of The Apes film in the domestic market, unadjusted for inflation. In several international markets like India, it has emerged as the biggest opener of the franchise.
Kingdom Of The Planet Of The Apes Grossed 129 Million Dollars Worldwide In First Weekend; What Is The Cause Of Concern?
The ape film has got the start that it was looking for and it is now all about how well it holds in the days to come. The cause of concern is that the Cinema Score, a rating metric for movies in US, is low and that may affect the movie’s box office legs. Similarly, the Maoyan and Douban ratings in China are not as promising as other ape films, and that can start showing effects in the overall box office trend.
Ideally, with a 57 million dollar domestic debut, Kingdom Of The Planet Of The Apes should be looking at a final gross of atleast around 140-150 million dollars. And for an unpredictable market like China, even hitting 25 million dollars can be seen as reasonably good.
Kingdom Of The Planet Of The Apes Is The Biggest Film Of The Franchise In India By Nett Collections
Talking about India, Kingdom Of The Planet Of The Apes managed a double digit first weekend as it netted around Rs 11.25 crores. While it opened higher than the local release Srikanth, it’s weekend numbers were lower. Regardless, Kingdom Of The Planet Of The Apes will become the biggest film of the franchise in India by the end of Monday. The last movie of the franchise released in 2017 and since then, the average ticket prices have more than doubled.
Watch the Kingdom Of The Planet Of The Apes Trailer
How Does Kingdom Of The Planet Of The Apes Stand Compared To Other Films Of The Franchise?
The last three Planet Of The Apes movies collected over 475 million dollars worldwide. Due to a diminished China market, reaching 475 million dollars will be an uphill task. At present, the first target for the movie will be to break into the 400 million dollar worldwide club, considering that it is budgeted at around 160 million dollars. This is the magical number for its theatrical breakeven. Obviously, being part of a valuable IP like Planet Of The Apes also means that it will see very good gains from non-theatrical revenue sources. In all, it is safe to say that Kingdom Of The Planet Of The Apes is yet another success story for the underrated franchise.
Kingdom Of The Planet Of The Apes In Theatres
Kingdom Of The Planet Of The Apes now plays at a theatre near you. Book your tickets now.
Each Planet of the Apesreboot has featured a central human in the conflict between the hyperintelligent apes and what remains of the human race. For the newly released Kingdom, our human proxy is Mae, played by The Witcher’s Freya Allan. Though she initially seems like a regular feral human—who can’t speak, as previously seen in War for the Planet of the Apes—it turns out Mae’s not what she seems: she’s intelligent and can talk like a modern person would, something Noa (Own Teague) has never seen before.
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Talking to the Hollywood Reporter, Allan opened up on a number of topics, including that reveal of Mae’s intelligence. In the interview, she admitted that she’d been fully prepared to lie about that aspect of her character, something director Wes Ball also wanted to be kept secret. Having that reveal come in one of the newer trailers was a “shame,” she remarked, but one she still hoped would catch viewers off guard like it does Noa and his companion Raka.
For those early moments where Mae seems like a regular ol’ feral, Allan drew upon moments from her childhood of pretending to be an animal. The intent was for Mae to strike a balance between not being a “too perfect” mimic of ferals she heard about in stories growing up and “a rabbit in the headlights” so she wouldn’t draw suspicion. With help from movement coordinator Alain Gauthier, Allan gave Mae a physicality similiar to other feral humans, but not entirely. “She’s not feral, and she doesn’t know that much about them. She hasn’t actually seen one [until early act two],” she stated. “So you need to see those small moments where you go, ‘She’s not the same as other humans.’”
In the second half of act two, it’s revealed that Mae isn’t just not feral, she was part of a small group of humans looking to destroy human technology locked in a vault in the heart of ape monarch Promixus’ kingdom. She achieves that goal by flooding the vault before escaping, but when she and Noa meet again at his home, it’s eventually revealed mid-conversation that she’s armed with a gun and is fully prepared to use it on him.
Allan called that scene “so different” from how it was originally shot: initially, Noa turned around and while he’s talking, she would’ve pointed that gun at the back of his head. “You think, ‘Oh my God, is she about to shoot him?’ And Mae is crying as she’s doing it, like, ‘Am I about to shoot him?’” Allan recalled. “And then she doesn’t. The minute he mentions Raka’s name, she puts the gun down.” It was changed in the editing to feel “more subtle,” a choice she advocated for since it makes for a murkier dynamic in future films.
“Mae was going there to kill [Noa] because he scares her,” she continued. “His intelligence scares her. She doesn’t want to kill him, but she feels she has to. And in that moment, she can’t. She’s done so many brutal things, but she can’t pull that trigger. So it becomes a very emotional goodbye, one with tragic, lingering doom. So that’s what I shot, but that’s the amazing thing about editing. You can change it and make it more up for interpretation.”
To Allan, Mae’s actions throughout the film were an even split between careful planning and thinking on the fly. Following Noa around and eventually speaking were planned, she said, but getting cornered by Proximus’ men accelerated that last part sooner than expected. In other moments, Mae knew her mission would be easier if she got Noa and his clan on her side, she just needed to keep her full intent close to the chest. There’s glimpses of genuine camaraderie between them that could speak to how humans and apes could co-exist, but at the end of the day, “she has her own motives, and they’re not on the same team. […] What else is she supposed to do? Just tell him instantly that she wants to reconnect the humans of the entire planet? Obviously not.”
The modern Apes movies don’t bring back their human characters, but it sounds like this new run of films will continue to have Mae as a central character (if they get made). Allan hopes to keep portraying Mae, if only to see where she, Noa, and the other characters go next. “There’s such a theme of everything that they’ve ever known being completely challenged,” she said, “and I really want to see what they then do with what they’ve learned and where that takes them and how the things that they’ve gone through affect them. I would love to return.”
Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes is now playing in theaters.
These days, it’s all too easy to bemoan Hollywood’s obsession with reboots and remakes, especially when Jurassic World and Ghostbusters have entered that equation the way they have.
And yet, 13 years ago, Rise of the Planet of the Apes stumbled thunderously into the fold, conclusively reminding us there’s nothing inherently wrong with reboots. If they improve on the original, they may even be preferable.
Indeed, since Franklin J. Schaffner first helmed that 1968 adaptation of Pierre Boulle’s novel, Apes remains a beloved science fiction franchise. 2011’s Rise of the Planet of the Apes ushered in the latest era of one of the most deftly intelligent sci-fi franchises to ever grace the big screen.
Speaking of which, between books, comics, television, and even video games, most would still probably say that the franchise seems most at home in the realm of feature films, and history certainly appears to be on the side of such a claim.
How many Planet of the Apes movies are there?
(20th Century Studios)
Counting Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes, which premieres next month, there are 10total films set in the varying canons of Planet of the Apes.
Things kicked off with the original Planet of the Apes movie back in 1968; that film would go on to spawn four sequels, Beneath the Planet of the Apes (1970), Escape from the Planet of the Apes (1971), Conquest of the Planet of the Apes (1972), and Battle for the Planet of the Apes (1973).
Tim Burton then proceeded to do Tim Burton things with a 2001 reboot starring Mark Wahlberg. The film received poor reviews and was regarded as a low point for the director. Despite a strong box office performance, Fox declined to make a sequel.
And then, along came Caesar in 2011. A spec script from Rick Jaffa and Amanda Silver proved to be the triumphant spark the franchise needed to remind us all that this is still Apes‘ world, and we’re just living in it. Rise would eventually be followed by Dawn of the Planet of the Apes and War for the Planet of the Apes.
Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes premieres on May 10, 2024, exclusively in theaters.
(featured image: 20th Century Fox)
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Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes, the fourth movie in Planet of the Apes‘ rebooted saga, is set to hit theatres on May 27, 2024. There’s no better time to catch up with the series, which has, overall, proven worthy of its critical acclaim and been a box-office success.
While the original Planet of the Apes movies, which were produced between 1968 and 1973, took place in a future where apes had risen to become the dominant species on the planet, the rebooted series chose to depict how apes came to hold such power over humanity. Planet of the Apes is a sci-fi classic. If ever there was a series worth digging into, it’s this one.
Here’s how to watch all of the newPlanet of the Apes movies in order.
Rise of the Planet of the Apes (2011)
(20th Century Studios)
In the first of the rebooted Planet of the Apes movies, a geneticist named Will Rodman (James Franco) is testing out a new cure for Alzheimer’s disease on chimpanzees at a laboratory in San Francisco. Though one of the test subjects was eventually shot after going on a rampage, her offspring, named Caesar (Andy Serkis), begins to develop rapidly, able to communicate through sign language and eventually even speak. Years later, when Ceasar comes into contact with other apes, he douses them with a new version of the same drug, heightening their intelligence, too. It turns out, however, that the drug can be deadly for humans. The apes eventually fight their way to freedom and escape into the forest.
Dawn of the Planet of the Apes (2014)
(20th Century Studios)
Dawn of the Planet of the Apes takes place ten years after Rise. A deadly pandemic has drastically decreased the human population, and society has collapsed, while the intelligent apes, whose numbers have only increased due to the virus, have established a state of their own. When a band of human survivors enters the apes’ territory, all hell breaks loose, and the apes are forced into a battle with humanity’s remaining armies.
War for the Planet of the Apes (2017)
(20th Century Studios)
Two years after the events of Dawn, War for the Planet of the Apes sees the war between apes and humans come to a head. The apes are forced into a ruthless, deadly battle by a vindictive human Colonel (Woody Harrelson), and they suffer heavy losses. Tapping into his darker side, Caesar vows to avenge his kind, and he and the Colonel get locked into an epic war that will determine the fate of apekind and humankind for years to come.
Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes (2024)
(20th Century Studios)
Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes will involve another significant time skip. While War for the Planet of the Apes depicted the end of the conflict between apes and humans, Kingdom will take us into the future that the original Planet of the Apes movies foretold. Apes are now the dominant species, and humans have regressed significantly, forced into exile. It’ll be interesting to see how much the apes’ society has grown and developed and what parallels can be drawn between Kingdom and the original Planet of the Apes movie. Some shots in the trailer show the apes using more dangerous, technologically advanced weapons, but we’ll have to wait and see how those play into the story.
This will be the first of the rebooted Planet of the Apes movies without Andy Serkis’ Caesar in the leading role. However, though it has yet to be confirmed, Kevin Durand will likely be playing Caesar’s son. Durand will be joined by The Witcher‘s Freya Allen in the lead human role.
20th Century Studios announced today that the next installment in the long-running sci-fi franchise will go into production next month. They also revealed the film’s official title: Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes, while also confirming the rumor that the movie is not some kind of remake or reboot, but rather a continuation of the most recent Planet of the Apes trilogy that began with 2011’s Rise of the Planet of the Apes and concluded with 2017’s War For the Planet of the Apes.
The official press release describes the project thusly:
This film starts an all-new chapter in the “Planet of the Apes” saga, picking up many years after the conclusion of 2017’s “War for the Planet of the Apes.” The screenplay is by Josh Friedman (“War of the Worlds”), Rick Jaffa and Amanda Silver (“Rise of the Planet of the Apes”), and PatrickAison(“Prey”). Joe Hartwick Jr. (“The Maze Runner” trilogy), Rick Jaffa, Amanda Silver and Jason Reed (“Mulan”) are the film’s producers. PeterCherninandJennoTopping are the executive producers.
Here is the full concept art drawing that they also unveiled today as well:
While Kingdom is set in the same fictional universe as the previous Apes trilogy that starred Andy Serkis as the ape leader Caesar, he will not appear in the film. Instead It’s Owen Teague will star, along with Freya Allen and Peter Macon. The film will be directed by The Maze Runner’s Wes Ball.
Will the Apes series once again return to the franchise’s central metaphors about racial and social strife? A movie set far after the events of War could potentially take the franchise in a totally new direction — and after nine previous movies, a little change of pace wouldn’t be such a bad thing.
Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes is expected to premiere in theaters in 2024.
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