Apes are hypocritical to the extreme. We see ape characters accusing humans of being barbaric and uncivilized and all that crap - but the ape civilization engages in the exact same kinds of activity.
At least humans are honest in their savagery!
So I'd have to take humanity's side, really.![]()
Taylor went through an unusual arc.
1) He started off being disillusioned with humanity. "There must be something out there better than man!"
2) He found someone who agreed with him-- the apes.
3) Now being hoist on his own loincloth, he inadvertently reversed himself by trying to defend humanity's cause. Hypocrisy, or just a reality check?
In any event, he took the position that man was still equal or superior to the apes.
4) He discovered he was wrong. He ended the first movie disillusioned with humanity again.
5) The second movie... well, the ending tells us that he was equally disillusioned with everyone. If we didn't know that already.
(Which is kind of amusing considering the number of illusions in the movie. )
Houyhnhnm loving weirdo.Horses seem to be neutral and happy in all the various versions of the Planet of the Apes, so I will take the side of the equines.
Houyhnhnm loving weirdo.Horses seem to be neutral and happy in all the various versions of the Planet of the Apes, so I will take the side of the equines.
Whichever side has air-conditioning.
Thanks. As jokes go it was just a modest proposal.Houyhnhnm loving weirdo.Horses seem to be neutral and happy in all the various versions of the Planet of the Apes, so I will take the side of the equines.
Points for the esoteric reference.![]()
Whichever side has air-conditioning.
Houyhnhnm loving weirdo.Horses seem to be neutral and happy in all the various versions of the Planet of the Apes, so I will take the side of the equines.
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