The first Planet of the Apes (1968) with Charlton Heston was a campy sci-fi B movie that addressed issues of race and nuclear holocaust.
Because the American social terrain changed tremendously during the almost quarter century between the releases of the original and the remake, the only comparable issue today is the Conflict over Palestine, but because of Jewish domination of Hollywood, screen writers and directors are prevented from addressing this conflict that has raged for more the 50 years.
In order to recreate the thematic "relevance" of the 1968 film, the new team of scream writers has rewritten the screenplay into an allegory of the Palestinian-Israeli conflict. The idea probably originated with Lawrence Konner, who has shown interest in the injustice that Palestinians have suffered.
Because Konner and Rosenthal have produced scripts for Golan-Globus, which is an Israeli government subsidized propaganda outfit, they seem to have developed a great deal of familiarity with the behavior and attitudes of many sorts of Israelis from murderous psychopathic military men to peace activists, who have not quite overcome all their prejudices.
Just as Zionists ape being natives of the
The movie apes exploit and abuse humans just as Zionists exploit and abuse Palestinians.
Just as Zionists justify their crimes with a ridiculous mythology, the apes justify their dominance over the humans with a ridiculous religion.
The tip-off to the real meaning of the story comes in the name of the "first ape," who laid the foundation for ape society. "Semos" is an obvious anagram for "Moses." At the end of the film, we learn that Semos killed the humans that had treated him with love and affection and that had been grateful for the aid that the genetically enhanced gene-spliced apes had given the crew of the starship Oberon.
Most of the reviewers were puzzled by the ending of the new movie, which is closer to the conclusion of the Pierre Boulle novel than it was to that of the original Planet of the Apes.
When the astronaut Leo Davidson returns to Earth, he finds that it has also become a planet of the apes. At the time of the release in 2001, the new ending seemed cryptic and incongruous, but now in 2008 after the manipulation of the US political system by Zionist Jewish Neocons stands open for all to see, the overall statement of the new version could not be more apt for the situation, in which we Americans now find ourselves.
The new Planet of the Apes only did okay at the box office. In 2001 not only were most Americans probably unready for an allegory of the crimes of Zionism in Palestine and of the Zionist takeover of the USA, but the director Tim Burton may not have had a complete understanding of the real nature of the script that the screenwriters had supplied.
Planet of the Apes | |
Directed by | |
Produced by | |
Written by | Novel |
Starring | Mark Wahlberg |
Music by | |
Distributed by | |
Release date(s) | |
Running time | 119 min. |
Language | |
Budget | $100,000,000 US (est) |
Gross revenue | $359,100,000 |
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Some more discussion of this topic is available at Digg.
The new Planet of the Apes is available to watch here.
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