SPOILERS!! !! SPOILERS!! !! SPOILERS!! !
I found it very interesting on how the roles were reversed from the 1968 Planet of the Apes. Taylor's getting hosed down, anamolously has "bright eyes", and is caged up to Ceasar's mom and apes with "the cure" being labelled "bright eyes", Ceasar getting hosed down, Ceasar being caged, and Ceasar basically "raging against the machine".
The inversion of the moral universe of the first Planet of the Apes (1968) is also interesting. Rather than the hero, it is the villain that says "take your stinkin paws off me, you damn dirty ape!" and "it's a madhouse!". Clearly, unlike the first Planet of the Apes, it is apparent that humans are the bastards and (non-human) Apes are the morally superior beings.
As some Discover blogs pointed out, this film wasn't neccessarily as luddite as people assumed. After all, it seems the "The Cure" made the (non-human) Apes more moral than most of the humans - witness the relatively bloodless coup (or is it more of a prison break?). The (non-human) Great Ape revolution starts off very nonviolently, it looks more like they're just trying to be free of human oppression. In later instalments, I can see this going down hill due to one or both of these factors:
- In a manner similar to "The Second Renaissance" (an Animatrix cartoon that served as a loose prequel to the Matrix film series), xenophobic humans fear this developing society and decide to crush it. This goes bad for the humans.
- That more brutal Chimp, the one who killed Jacobs, decides to take charge of the revolution and steer it towards wipping out the humans, either by winning power from Ceasar violently or nonviolently acruing greater influence in the (non-human) Great Ape ranks, or succedding Ceasar after his death by either natural causes or human attack.
I suspect both factors will be at play and, given the hint at the end, the Cure 2.0 will decimate human ranks. They'll probably be some twist, like only humans with severe hereditary speech disorders can survived the plague, explaining the mutism of all people in the 1968 film.
I also liked this film because it showed how the (non-human) Great Apes rose up without having to fall back on an earlier Planet of the Apes, i.e. some perpetual loop type time travel genesis story. It truly pulled the Planet of the Apes genesis story up in a chronologically normal, by its own bootstraps, manner.
SPOILERS!! ! SPOILERS!! !! SPOILERSSS