DVD - 2 Disc Set - 35th Anniversary Pan & Scan Edition Learn more
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| More Formats | |
|---|---|
| DVD - 35th Anniversary Widescreen Edition | $12.95 |
| DVD - Wide Screen | $14.99 |
| Blu-ray - Wide Screen / DTS | $27.99 |
Closed Caption; Full-length audio commentary by composer Jerry Goldsmith; Full-length audio commentary by actors Roddy McDowall, Natalie Trundy, Kim Hunter, and makeup artist John Chambers; Text commentary by Eric Greene (author of "Planet of the Apes as American Myth"); "Behind the Planet of the Apes" documentary hosted by Roddy McDowall; Rare Planet of the Apes dailies and outtakes; Roddy McDowall's on-set movie footage; Original makeup test with Edward G. Robinson; Making-of featurettes; Still photo galleries (film reviews, posters, costume sketches); DVD-ROM content; Theatrical trailers
Full Product DetailsSide #1 -- Disc 1
1. The Long Sleep
2. Main Titles
3. Crash Landing
4. The Expedition
5. The Seekers
6. Life
7. Scarecrows
8. The Clothes Snatchers
9. The Hunt
10. Zira
11. Dr. Zaius
12. Cornelius
13. "My Name Is Taylor"
14. "It's a Stunt"
15. No Escape
16. "It's a Madhouse"
17. The Hearing
18. New Identity
19. Talking Heresy
20. Zaius' Fear
21. The Abduction
22. The Forbidden Zone
23. On the Beach
24. The Cave
25. The Hostage
26. Saying Goodbye
27. The Revelation
28. Cast of Characters
Simply put, Planet of the Apes is a great film. The various film and TV sequels, the collectable lunch boxes, and the lingering visions of thespians emoting through simian-shaped latex can't obscure that fact. Like the Pierre Boulle novel that inspired it, the film has just enough satirical wit to carry the day. Three American astronauts, including Charlton Heston, crash-land into an upside-down world where the apes are civilized and humans are wild. Heston's overblown performance as George Taylor is legendary -- his delivery alone makes for great one-liners. The actors playing apes are also riveting: Roddy McDowall and Kim Hunter shine through their makeup (which won a special Academy Award) as a pair of scientists who befriend Taylor. Also chewing the scenery is Maurice Evans, who, as Dr. Zaius, sees Taylor as a threat to the ape status quo. Sharply directed by Franklin Schaffner, the film features some stunning scenery and a superb score by Jerry Goldsmith. But the real fun comes from such throwaways as "Human see, human do" and "I never met an ape I didn't like" (The Twilight Zone's Rod Serling was one of the screenwriters). Good to the last shot, Planet of the Apes also boasts one of the best endings in cinema history. You'll laugh. You'll cry. You'll groan out loud. Gregory Baird, Barnes & Noble
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