Showing posts with label Roddy McDowall. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Roddy McDowall. Show all posts

We Invite You To Return To The Planet of the Apes

From The Monster Island News Website

In 1966 Franklin J. Schaffner had purchased the rights to what he thought would make excellent movie. Pierre Boulle's novel "La Planete des singes." He peddled the idea to almost every studio in Hollywood, but nobody wanted anything to do with his "Monkey Planet." Studio executives thought the idea of talking apes would be laughed at. A ray of light came when he presented his idea to both Arthur P. Jacobs and Charlton Heston. Both signed on to produce and star in his movie. Now he had what he needed a huge star and some credibility. This got him in the door with Fox and got him his chance. Once again there were hesitations. What if the apes looked too fake? Could it be believable? A test scene was shot to test early ideas for the ape makeup. The test would feature Heston, Edward G. Robinson as Dr. Zaius, and Linda Harrison as Zira. It worked. The makeup test proved it could be done without looking cheesy. The movie was a go.

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20th Century Fox Wants You To... Go Ape! - Planet of the Apes (1968) - Numbered Poster Print

20th Century Fox Wants You To... Go Ape! - Planet of the Apes (1968) - Numbered Poster Print

$10 at View Obscura

This is an original poster graphic print featuring an image from Planet of the Apes (1968). The print looks amazing matted to 8 x 10 to 24 x 36 and framed and will make a great addition to your movie memorabilia collection. A must for all sci fi movie fans!

Watermark does not appear on actual image.

This image was created by renowned California photographer Ken Hulsey.

Each image is a limited edition that is signed by the artist and numbered (1-50).

The image is printed on professional studio grade glossy paper by a professional photography studio not a home printer.

The item will be shipped in an acid free bag with a protective board to prevent folding or creasing.

Larger items will be shipped rolled in a protective tube.

Limited Edition: 50 numbered pieces

"I can't help thinking that somewhere in the universe there has to be something better than man. Has to be." - George Taylor

In 1966 Franklin J. Schaffner had purchased the rights to what he thought would make excellent movie. Pierre Boulle's novel "La Planete des singes." He peddled the idea to almost every studio in Hollywood, but nobody wanted anything to do with his "Monkey Planet." Studio executives thought the idea of talking apes would be laughed at. A ray of light came when he presented his idea to both Arthur P. Jacobs and Charlton Heston. Both signed on to produce and star in his movie. Now he had what he needed a huge star and some credibility. This got him in the door with Fox and got him his chance. Once again there were hesitations. What if the apes looked too fake? Could it be believable? A test scene was shot to test early ideas for the ape makeup. The test would feature Heston, Edward G. Robinson as Dr. Zaius, and Linda Harrison as Zira. It worked. The makeup test proved it could be done without looking cheesy. The movie was a go.

The next major hurdle would lie in the story itself. The Boulle novel featured the apes as a highly advanced civilization with modern vehicles and cities. The early Rod Serling scripts followed these themes. However the budget that Fox had assigned was not sufficient enough to handle both huge effects and a huge makeup tab. The makeup was crucial to the success of the production. The apes had to be more primitive. Michael Wilson was brought on board and together with Serling the two hammered out the finished screenplay with the apes having a more technologically challenged society. With this and John Chambers makeup ready the production began. The film with all it's technological difficulties was completed on time and on budget.

The film would center around George Taylor (Heston) an astronaut who had given up on mankind and traveled the stars to find out just what else the universe had to offer. He and his crew of three, one woman and two other men, traveled to the deepest reaches of space in suspended animation. Something would go terribly wrong with their spacecraft and it would crash-land off course on some unknown world. The three men would survive. The woman died in her sleep a year or so prior to the crash. The three survivors would march across a hostile desert before reaching a plush oasis with food and running water. A relaxing dip in the pond would lead to the group loosing their clothes and their first meeting with a group of primitive humans. Was this the best this planet had to offer?

A moments peace would be short lived. The humans would seem to be the hunted on this new world. As scared tribesmen would run in every direction the astronauts would get their first look at the dominant species. Apes! A desperate chase would ensue. One astronaut would be killed. Another netted. Taylor would end up shot in the throat and knocked out.

He would awaken days later in a cage in some sort of animal hospital. He would be under the care of a kind chimpanzee doctor named Zira (Kim Hunter). Zira had a kind heart toward the humans she worked with. She believed humans could be civilized. A notion laughed at by her fellow doctors. She saw something in Taylor.

Taylor would try to communicate with Zira, but his throat injury would prevent him from speaking. This would have gotten him attention because no other humans could speak. Taylor would be presented with a young woman, Nova (Linda Harrison), for a mate. He would connect with her although she was a primitive. Zira would end up naming Taylor "Bright Eyes" because of his advanced skills and blue eyes. She would show him off to both her fiance Cornelius and her supervisor Dr. Zaius. Both would scoff at her notion that he was different than other humans. Yet Dr. Zaius would recognize the dangers in a advanced human. He would soon plot Taylor's demise. Soon Taylor would steal Zira's notepad and write his name. She then understood that he could communicate and that he would be in danger.

Taylor would manage to escape. He would be chased throughout the Ape city and eventually be captured. That is when he would seal his fate a utter his first words. "Get your paws off me, you damned dirty ape!" A human had spoken. The apes were terrified. Taylor would be tried as a heretic. His fate would be experimental brain surgery to find out what makes him tick. Dr. Zaius would see to it personally. He knew more than he would let on.

Zira and Cornelius would free both Taylor and Nova. Their only hope would be to reach Cornelius's dig deep in what the apes call "The Forbidden Zone". A vast area of land that nothing lived in. The desert Taylor and his group had traveled across days earlier. Once there Cornelius would show Taylor the artifacts he had found proving an advanced civilization that preexisted before the apes. Zaius and his gorilla army would soon find them. Taylor would manage to take Zaius hostage. At gunpoint he would reveal the truth. Man was indeed there first and that he had destroyed his society. Taylor would agree to let Zaius free for his safe passage into the forbidden zone. Zaius would agree. Both out of fear of man and with the hope that he would die in the desert. He would bid farewell to his new ape friends and venture forth with Nova. Zaius would destroy all the evidence of the human society.

This would lead to one of the greatest scenes in movie history. The half buried Statue of Liberty on the beach to end the film. Taylor would then recite one of the most memorable lines in cinema history once he realized that he was on Earth and that mankind had destroyed itself in some nuclear nightmare.
"YOU MANIACS! YOU BLEW IT UP! DAMN YOU! GOD DAMN YOU ALL TO HELL!!"

"Beware the beast man, for he is the Devil's pawn. Alone among God's primates, he kills for sport or lust or greed. Yea, he will murder his brother to possess his brother's land. Let him not breed in great numbers, for he will make a desert of his home and yours. Shun him, for he is the harbinger of death." - The Sacred Scrolls

Planet of the Apes Behind the Scenes Photos and Trivia

Planet of the Apes Trivia:

Roddy McDowall, an experienced actor, recommended to his companions in makeup that they should frequently add tics, blinks and assorted facial gestures to add a sense of realism and keep the makeup from appearing "mask-like". McDowall reportedly became a merry prankster with the makeup, driving home with his make-up on, and shocking some of the other drivers on the freeway.

McDowall also appeared on an episode of The Carol Burnett Show wearing his Planet of the Apes make-up. The look of fright on Carol Burnett's face was reputed to be genuine.

During breaks in filming, actors made up as different ape species tended to hang out together, gorillas with gorillas, orangutans with orangutans, chimps with chimps. It wasn't required, it just naturally happened.



All the Ape actors and extras were required to wear their masks even during breaks and in between shots because it took so much time to make them up. Because of this, meals were liquefied and drunk through straws.


Although Charlton Heston's character is listed in the credits as "George Taylor", the name "George" is never seen or heard in the film. He is referred to only as "Taylor".


The fourth astronaut Stewart was originally written as a man.


Charlton Heston was sick during much of the film with the flu. Rather than wait for him to get better, the producers felt that his hoarse voice added something to the character of Taylor. According to Heston's diary, after filming the scene where Taylor and Nova are forcibly separated, he wrote that he was feeling like hell while shooting because of his illness, and felt even worse "every time that damn fire hose hit me".


Turning down the part of Zira was one of Ingrid Bergman's greatest regrets. Much surprised at how well the finished film turned out, she later confided to her daughter Isabella Rossellini that in hindsight the film would have been an ideal opportunity for her to "disregard her regal bearing". She also regretted missing the opportunity of working with Charlton Heston.


Actress Kim Hunter (Zira) was a political activist, she signed several civil rights petitions and was a sponsor of a 1949 World Peace Conference in New York - which triggered her label of being a Communist sympathizer, for which she was blacklisted in films and TV even though she never even held pro-Communist views. Her testimony to the New York Supreme Court in 1962 against the publishers of "Red Channels" helped pave the way for clearance of many performers unjustly accused of Communist connections.


Linda Harrison, who plays Nova, was having an affair with producer Richard D. Zanuck at the time of production. In the year of the film's release, Zanuck divorced his first wife and married Harrison. The couple were married for 9 years and had 2 children.


The first director to spot the potential in Pierre Boulle's novel was Blake Edwards. He brought on board leading sci-fi writer Rod Serling who produced nearly 40 drafts of the screenplay. While Serling was able to get to grips with the structure, he gave full credit to Michael G. Wilson for the final screenplay.

The final scene with Taylor coming across the Statue of Liberty was suggested by Rod Serling. According to rumor, Pierre Boulle was greatly upset by this ending, but later warmed to it, preferring this new ending over the very different ending he had written. The skeletal remains of the torch appear as "set decoration" in the final episode of Lost in Space: Junkyard of Space.


John Chambers' outstanding makeup technique pioneered in the film was based upon one technique he had used during World War II to give disfigured veterans a normal appearance. Chambers spent many hours watching the apes at Los Angeles Zoo, studying their facial expressions. Several other productions were delayed due to the fact that many of Hollywood's top make up artists were working on this film. Leftover makeup supplies were later used on actor Michael Conrad, playing an ape-like alien in Lost in Space: Fugitives in Space. The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences gave Chambers a special award for makeup (which was not an Oscar category until 1981) for this achievement, in the second time that a make-up artist received an Academy Award. [William Tuttle was the first, with 7 Faces of Dr. Lao (1964)]. Chambers' award was presented by Walter Matthau and a chimpanzee in a tuxedo.


Although it is widely believed that the budget for the ape make-up was at a million dollars, Assoc Producer Mort Abrahams later revealed via interview that the make-up was "more like half a million...but a million dollars (quote) made better publicity". Abrahams was certainly qualified to know, since his function was more as the active Line Producer through Planet of the Apes & Beneath the Planet of the Apes.


In December of 1998 The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences (AMPAS) honored Roddy McDowall for his acting career and critically acclaimed photography by naming its photo archive after him. The collection, which includes several million negatives and stills, will be known as the Roddy McDowall Photograph Archive at the Margaret Herrick Library.


Early in the movie during the establishing shots when the crew are marching through the desert through to the Forbidden Zone, a panoramic shot of the surrounding canyons shows a man next to an automobile in the distance.


Shortly after the astronauts have crash landed Taylor is asked where he thinks they are, having no idea he sarcastically responds, "We're some 320 light years from Earth on an unnamed planet in orbit around a star in the constellation of Orion." In the original novel the story takes place on a planet in orbit around the star Betelgeuse, which is in the constellation of Orion.


The filming location of the classic final scene has been erroneously thought to be Cabo San Lucas, Mexico, but is in fact Malibu, California. For die-hard fans who want to visit the true location, it is a secluded cove on the far eastern end of Westward Beach, between Zuma Beach and Point Dume. Ignore the wide curving beach by the car park and clamber over the rocks to the east until you get to the quiet, often deserted, little beach surrounded by cliffs. (The Statue of Liberty was an optical effect skillfully achieved with a matte painting blended into a still existing rock
structure.)

Trivia from IMDB

The Monstrous Movie Photo Of The Day: Meet Baby Milo Who Has Washington Terrified

Written By: Ken Hulsey

Well moviephiles it's Oscar night! What does that mean here at Monster Island News? Well since "Annie Hall" beat out "Star Wars" in 1977 I haven't held the award in any form of high regard so I'm posting about a film that wasn't nominated for one, namely "Escape From The Planet Of The Apes".

I know, your confused. Why the hell would I post about a "Planet Of The Apes" movie on Oscar night? Well I think that the film really had all the qualities that The Academy generally looks for like drama, action, great acting, monkeys ... talking monkeys, a tear jerker ending and that sexy Ricardo Montalban. What's not to like?

Not buying it?

Hey just think about how hard it would be to try and act with all that John Chambers ape makeup on? Roddy McDowall and Kim Hunter should have rolled out of the place with statues and expensive gift baskets ... but alas ... they didn't.

Hey I know Chambers won an Oscar for his makeup work on the original "Planet of the Apes" ... that fact isn't lost on me.

Back to the photograph at hand. The image is a promotional photo that was distributed to printed media outlets. In the case of this particular photo it a key art image of the film's poster probably intended for theater showing adverts in newspapers though magazines could have featured the image as well.

It is an 8x10 photograph on glassy stock paper and it's serial number is 22X28.

Overall this is one the prize images in my collection because it features Cornelius (McDowall), Zira (Hunter) and that adorable little chimp Milo who has the government going bananas ... bad pun ... ape shit ... worse pun ... okay on a blood-thirsty rampage of senseless violence.

Okay the fact that I love all the "Apes" films (not the Tim Burton one ... blech) doesn't hurt.

I like that whole "blood-thirsty rampage of senseless violence" part.

Here's your history:

Escape from the Planet of the Apes, directed by Don Taylor, is a 1971 science fiction film starring Roddy McDowall, Kim Hunter, Bradford Dillman and Ricardo Montalbán. It is the third of five films in the original Planet of the Apes series produced by Arthur P. Jacobs, the second being Beneath the Planet of the Apes (1970). Its plot centers around many social issues of the day including scientific experimentation on animals, nuclear war and government intrusion. The film was well received by critics, getting the best reviews of the four Planet of the Apes sequels. It was followed by Conquest of the Planet of the Apes.

- Wikipedia

Planet Of The Apes (1974)(TV)

Planet of the Apes (1974)(TV)
20th Century Fox Television
CBS Television

Directed By: Alf Kjellin, Arnold Laven, Don McDougall, Bernard McEveety, John Meredyth Lucas, Ralph Senensky, Jack Starrett & Don Weis
Written By: Walter Black, Pierre Boulle (Novel), Booker Bradshaw, Arthur Browne Jr., Richard Collins, Howard Dimsdale, Robert Hamner, Edward J. Lakso, Anthony Lawrence, Robert W. Lenski, Barry Oringer, Joe Ruby, Ken Spears, Art Wallace & Shimon Wincelberg

Cast:
Roddy McDowall as Galen
Ron Harper as Alan Virdon
James Naughton as Peter J. Burke
Booth Colman as Councillor Zaius
Mark Lenard as General Urko
John Hoyt as Prefect Barlow
Ron Stein as Gorilla Guard
Eldon Burke as Trooper
Martin E. Brooks as Leander / Konag
John Milford as Sestus / Miller
Wayne Foster as Gorilla Sergeant

Runtime: 14 - 60 Minute Episodes
Country: USA
Language: English
Color: Color
Sound: Mono
Air Date: September 13, 1974

Buy The Complete 'Planet of the Apes' Tv series from Amazon for $17.99

Many modern science fiction fans truly do not realize just how popular the Planet of the Apes franchise was in the early 70's. The classic film Planet of the Apes spawned four sequels, two TV series (one animated), and hordes of merchandise including dolls, playsets and books. Many consider Star Wars to be the first film to spawn such a toy boom, but "Apes" produced almost as much of a craze several years earlier.

Roddy McDowall would be asked to put on John Chambers makeup one last time in the CBS networks TV adaption of Planet of the Apes. This time McDowall would not be playing Cornelius, the character made famous by the actor in the "Apes" movie series, but Galen an aide to Councillor Zaius (Booth Colman) who befriends two stranded astronauts from Earth's past played by Ron Harper and James Naughton. The series would also star popular Star Trek actor Mark Lenard (Spock's father Sarek) as the mercilous leader of the gorilla army General Urko.

The series itself would follow the basic storyline from the first two Planet of the Apes films with some slight changes. Just like in the first "Apes" film a group of Astronauts from Earth's past crash land in the future, where mankind has destroyed itself, and apes have become the dominant species. Unlike the film series, however, the humans in this series were not mute savages, but humble slaves. It would have made for some boring TV if nobody talked. Also the original films centered around New York while the TV series took place near the ruins of San Francisco. Ultimately the series would focus on Alan, Peter and Galen running from Zaius, Urko and the Gorilla Army while meeting interesting humans who help them escape. Each new episode would introduce new friends and new enemies while working around the basic "chase" outline.

The series, despite being very well written and having a core of established actors, ultimately would suffer the same fate that Battlestar Galactica would suffer four years later. It is a known fact that the show just too expensive to produce. The makeup alone chewed up most of the allocated budget and left very little else for effects and location shots. This limited the series to shooting almost exclusively on the now famous Fox Ranch (Now Malibu State Park) that was used in the first two "Apes" movies. Average ratings versus high production costs means cancellation no matter how good a show is. Planet of the Apes was clearly a show ahead of it's time.