Rendező:
Don TaylorForgatókönyvíró:
Paul DehnOperatőr:
Joseph F. BirocZeneszerző:
Jerry GoldsmithSzereplők:
Roddy McDowall, Kim Hunter, Bradford Dillman, Eric Braeden, Ricardo Montalban, Sal Mineo, Albert Salmi, Jason Evers, John Randolph, M. Emmet Walsh (több)Streaming (4)
Tartalmak(1)
Az Itéletnap elől menekülve két intelligens majom-tudós, Cornelius (Roddy McDowall) és Zira (Kim Hunter) visszautazik az időben, hogy elmeneküljön a világméretű pusztulás elől. A mai Los Angelesbe érve pillanatok alatt a karhatalom fogságába kerülnek. Az állandó kihallgatások, tesztek és kísérletek testileg-lelkileg tönkreteszik a majmokat, és szökési kísérletük is kudarcba fullad. Egyetlen reményük Zira börtönben született és nevelkedett gyermeke, akinek sikerül megszöknie... (AMC Hungary)
(több)Recenziók (3)
A better sequel to the original film than Conquest of the Planet of the Apes, especially since this has some at least slightly original ideas and (at least at first glance) doesn't just benefit from something that someone else did right the first time. Admittedly, in Escape from the Planet of the Apes, it is as if two films come together - a dissolute visit to the monkey-nauts in our world and a later dramatic hunt for them, but it didn't seem to me that the two stories contradicted each other much. Instead, one flowed smoothly into the other. ()
In terms of ideas, the third part of the monkey saga corresponds much more to the novel template than the second part, and although the writer was clearly a little tired and squeezed out everything from the subject, my overall rating comes out as a weak three stars and a 50% overall impression. The subsequent two parts of the saga clearly led the whole theme into a hole. ()
When people were exposed to a world where apes dominate, why couldn't intelligent apes be exposed to a world where humans still dominate? This is probably what the creators thought and they went ahead with it, resulting in them making the third film in the Planet of the Apes series. It's intriguing at first glance, but upon closer inspection, it's quite unremarkable and doesn't really develop the mythology. It simply shows that the way we treat others reflects back on us, a message already eloquently conveyed by the brilliant first film. ()