The three final battles I watched in the cinema, I added one or two after I came back.
The three films together are a complete process of rise, but the commercial film has an epic feel. I once thought that I would not dare to watch it because I was afraid of the appearance of the orangutan, but Caesar let people see the rise of a king, regardless of race.
One is about the growth of self, Caesar gradually realizes who I am, where I came from, which is the awakening of self-consciousness; the second is about the self-recognition of leaders, facing how humans and apes can coexist peacefully Problems, Caesar has become more mature and more responsible; in the three parts, ushered in the ultimate decisive battle, Caesar in his twilight shows the importance of the family, but also has self-principles wandering and reflection, and finally sacrificed himself to save the ethnic group.
The character of Caesar is full and soulful, which allows us to feel emotions even if we do not stand in the subjective perspective of human beings.
What I like very much is that the film does not have too many lines, which requires the plot to have enough appeal, but it also conveys thinking about responsibility, human nature, class, and racial survival.
The huge framework constructed by the trilogy is far beyond ordinary commercial films, but the details are also meticulous. The repeated definition of human beings by apes is also the repeated cognition of human beings, reflecting the social structure of human self. When a new civilization emerges, when the world is no longer ruled by human beings, and when the social status of human beings is challenged, how should we face it?
View more about War for the Planet of the Apes reviews