Showing posts with label Tame. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tame. Show all posts

Wednesday, 1 December 2021

The Monochromatic Superman of 1955




“Psychologically 
Superman undermines 
The Authority.”

— Frederick Wertham,
Seduction of The Innocent.



“During the years of the Second World War, the superhero concept spread like wildfire, but then died as rapidly and mysteriously as it had begun. Mass popular interest dwindled sharply after 1945, and superhero titles disappeared to be replaced by genre books that tripled the overall sales of the comics business between 1945 and 1954. Horror, Western, humor, romance, and war titles proliferated and made the kind of money that superheroes couldn’t match. With no more heroes left to hold back the tide, the streets of the American popular imagination filled with zombies, junkies, radioactive monsters, and sweating gunmen.


  What had made the superheroes so resonant and then so equally irrelevant? Was it only World War II that gave the supermen their urgent significance? The end of the war tipped Americans into a new age of plenty and paranoia. The United States had everything, but it shared with its enemies a superweapon capable of reducing even the sunniest suburban garden party to a fleshless, howling wasteland. Is it any wonder that gloomy existentialism captured so many imaginations in the 1950s? In the postwar West, having X-ray eyes would henceforth be a horror movie curse.


  We end the Golden Age as it began, with Superman —one of the last survivors of the initial brief expansion and rapid contraction of the DC universe. It had been too much too soon for the superheroes, but although many of them would lie dormant for decades, no potential trademark truly dies. The superheroes, like cockroaches or Terminators, are impossible to kill. 


But in 1954 a sinister scientist straight from the pages of the comics tried to wipe them all out and came close to succeeding.


  As the lights went out on the Golden Age, characters such as Superman, Batman, and Wonder Woman, who’d achieved a wider recognition thanks to serials and merchandising, survived the cull. Because of their status as backup strips in Adventure Comics, second stringers like Green Arrow and Aquaman weathered the storm—perhaps undeservedly—but the survivors did not always flourish.


  For instance, a popular TV series (1953’s The Adventures of Superman) had cemented Superman’s status as an American icon, but budgetary restrictions meant that its star, the likeable but ultimately troubled George Reeves, was rarely seen in the air. At best, he might jump in through a window at an angle that suggested methods of entry other than flight, possibly involving trampolines. The stories revolved around low-level criminal activity in Metropolis and ended when Superman burst through another flimsy wall to apprehend another gang of bank robbers or spies. Bullets would bounce from his monochrome chest (the series was shot and transmitted before color TV, so Reeves’s costume was actually rendered in grayscale, not red and blue, which wouldn’t have contrasted so well in black and white.)


  Reeves, at nearly forty, was a patrician Superman with a touch of gray around the temples and a physique that suggested middle-aged spread rather than six-pack, but he fit the mold of the fifties establishment figure: fatherly, conservative, and trustworthy


The problem with Superman was more obvious in the comic books. By aping the kitchen-sink scale of the Reeves show, Superman’s writers and artists squandered his epic potential on a parade of gangsters, pranksters, and thieves. The character born in a futurist blaze of color and motion had washed up on a black-and-white stage set, grounded by the turgid rules of a real world that kept his wings clipped and his rebel spirit chained. Superman was now locked into a death trap more devious than anything Lex Luthor could have devised. Here was Superman—even Superman—tamed and domesticated in a world where the ceiling, not the sky, was the limit.


  Fifties comics had taken a turn toward the dark, lurid, and horrific. The story of EC Comics, which replaced the popularity of the hero titles and brought about a nationwide moral panic, is a fascinating one and has been covered in depth elsewhere—David Hajdu’s The Ten-Cent Plague: The Great Comic-Book Scare and How It Changed America has a chilling fifteen-page roll call of artists and writers, many young and promising, who never worked again after the comic-book purges of the fifties. But this book is about superheroes, and for superheroes, times were especially tough.


  Imagine the response at a dinner party this evening if you whipped out your rouged nipples and proudly announced a passion for hard-core pedophile pornography. As difficult as it may be to believe today, in 1955 the kind of outrage that would reasonably greet your twisted confession was directed toward artists, writers, editors, and anyone else involved in the business of comic books. Comic books and their creators were painted as cunning corrupters of children, as monstrous artifacts crafted by experts to twist young and impressionable minds in the direction of crime, drug addiction, and perversion.


  At the heart of this attempt to annihilate an art form was an elderly psychiatrist named Fredric Wertham who would throw his considerable weight and expertise behind a sustained hate campaign aimed at comic books. His 1954 best-seller Seduction of the Innocent blamed the comics and their creators for every social ill to afflict America’s children.


  However, it wasn’t just EC’s often tasteless horror stories that fired Dr. Wertham’s rage; almost inexplicably, it was the innocent, floundering superhero titles that really got him foaming. Like any good predator, he could sense their weakness and knew that no articulate voice was likely to speak up as comic books’ advocate. If an “expert” like Wertham said they were pornography, then they were pornography. With little to offend anyone in the content of these comics, Wertham was forced to dig deep into an ever-fertile loam of subtext in order to justify a fevered one-handed attack that was conducted with the same brutish, ignorant disregard for the truth that was said to characterize America’s enemies.


  For example, in Batman’s living arrangements with ward Dick Grayson (Robin) and Alfred the butler, the good doctor was certain that he discerned the “wish-dream of two homosexuals living together.” Perhaps it was the wish-dream of two homosexuals. Only those particular two homosexuals could tell us for certain.

  Yes, it’s all too easy from a knowing adult perspective to infer Bruce Wayne’s epicene qualities. It wouldn’t take much pressure to gently dial up all the familiar elements of a Batman story until the fetishistic homosexual undercurrent implicit in the basic scenario of three generations of men living together in luxury and lawlessness stood revealed in all its black rubber glory. Director Joel Schumacher walked some way down that road in his universally reviled 1997 film Batman and Robin, with George Clooney, Chris O’Donnell, and Michael Gough occupying the central roles. There’s a case to be made for the satanic and even sexually transgressive appeal of Batman to adults: wealthy, literally Plutonian, and of the underworld, Batman inhabits a subterranean secret lair, dresses in badass black leather, enjoys the company of a small boy in tights, and has no steady girlfriend. Perhaps there remains to be written the great gay Batman story where he and Robin, and potentially Alfred too, are going at it like trip hammers between Batmobile cruising scenes, but the hollow specter of Dr. Wertham can take it from me that the young readers of Batman saw only a wish-dream of freedom and high adventure. It is Wertham whose name belongs in the annals of perversity, not Batman’s.


  Unsurprisingly, Wertham’s blue-movie take on Wonder Woman cast her as an outrageous lesbian, representing an island of perverse militant dykes with a taste for ritual bondage and domination. Astonishingly, he seemed almost oblivious to the more candid kinks of his rival pop psychologist Marston’s lifestyle, gnawing instead at the blatant lesbian shout-out in Wonder Woman’s oft-repeated oath, “SUFFERING SAPPHO!” which no doubt conjured predictable images in the good doctor’s strobe-lit imagination.


  But it was Superman—benign Superman—who bore the brunt of Wertham’s hatred. Describing the Man of Steel as a fascistic distortion of truth designed to make children feel inadequate and inclined toward delinquency, he opined obliquely:


  How can they respect the hard-working mother, father, or teacher who is so pedestrian, trying to teach the common rules of conduct, wanting you to keep your feet on the ground and unable even figuratively speaking to fly through the air? 


Psychologically Superman undermines The Authority and Dignity of the ordinary man and woman in the minds of children.”


  In Wertham’s diagnosis, then, children were too underdeveloped to separate the outlandish fantasy in their comic books from everyday reality, and this made them vulnerable to barely concealed homosexual and antisocial content.


  I tend to believe the reverse is true: that it’s adults who have the most trouble separating fact from fiction. A child knows that real crabs on the beach do not sing or talk like the cartoon crabs in The Little Mermaid. A child can accept all kinds of weird-looking creatures and bizarre occurrences in a story because the child understands that stories have different rules that allow for pretty much anything to happen.


  Adults, on the other hand, struggle desperately with fiction, demanding constantly that it conform to the rules of everyday life. Adults foolishly demand to know how Superman can possibly fly, or how Batman can possibly run a multibillion-dollar business empire during the day and fight crime at night, when the answer is obvious even to the smallest child: because it’s not real.


  Wertham’s assault made comics the focus of a nationwide hate campaign. Good Americans who had grown up with the inoffensive adventures of Superman and Batman gathered in howling mobs to burn superhero comics in mountainous heaps upon which the colorful, optimistic dream-people were turned to flame and ash, smoke and soot. (Within ten years, packs of goons just like these would be hurling Beatles albums on similar bonfires with equal brainless fervor.)


  In 1954 congressional hearings left horror publisher EC Comics wounded beyond repair. Purged of outlaw content, the remaining publishers banded together for survival and drafted a draconian Comics Code that would ensure child-friendly content. In its mean-spirited, machinelike thoroughness, its precise articulation of dos and don’ts, it was almost—to use the language of the day—Soviet in tone. In many ways, born from similar circumstances, the Comics Code mirrored the Hays Motion Picture Production Code of 1930, which aimed to transform the racy, intoxicated Hollywood movies into inoffensive, sexless fairy tales. The Thought Police were marching proudly in the Land of the Free :


  Policemen, judges, government officials, and respected institutions shall never be presented in such a way as to create disrespect for established Authority.


  Scenes dealing with, or instruments associated with, walking dead, torture, vampires and vampirism, ghouls, cannibalism, and werewolfism are prohibited.


  Respect for parents, the moral code, and for honorable behavior shall be fostered.


  And so on. Comics that conformed to code standards were published with a little “Approved by the Comics Code Authority” stamp in the top right corner. Comic books that didn’t carry the code were unlikely to be distributed or given space on newsstands and therefore faced extinction, so it was in the interests of publishers to comply. It seemed now that even the form that had conceived the superheroes, the 2-D universe in which they lived, was in peril.


  The Golden Age was over. But the world in which the heroes were dying was a world that needed them like never before. Fifties America was a land of edginess and prowling paranoia hovering as it did on the verge of thermonuclear annihilation. Alone at night, in the midst of unprecedented luxury after a successfully won world war, Americans were more frightened than ever before; there was fear of the Bomb, the Communist, the Homo, the Negro, the Teenager, the Id, the Flying Saucers, the Existential Void. There was the space race, with its launch into the limitless unknown, and Kinsey’s groundbreaking surveys into the sexual habits of Americans, opening the dripping treasure chest of a buttoned-up country’s inner life, revealing a sleep world of polychromatic polymorphous perversity acted out behind a camouflage of pipe-smoking patriarchs and Stepford wives. There were as many different kinds of fear as there were brands of gum.


  And as America turned its gaze inward in search of solutions to its sunlit terrors, it found The Shadow, and the multiheaded thing in the cellar emerged blinking in the light : Survival cultists, split personalities, UFO contactees like George Adamski were all admitted to the discourse, and people were willing to listen


The Dharma Bums and the beatniks had begun to crystallize from the margins into A Movement. The queer, the criminal, the deranged, and the inspired emerged like Morlocks from subterranean nightclub cellars spitting poetry. The spread of psychedelics and marijuana through the jazz underground into the arts schools and the emergent culture of rock ’n’ roll hastened the rise of this fringe. The urge to control and tame the American subconscious was now spawning new things to attempt to control, newer and weirder ideas to understand and explain away.


  By the middle of the twentieth century, then, history was happening too fast, at an increasingly heightened pitch, and the tide of futurity seemed unstoppable. Nothing was stable after all. Not the war, not the peace, not the Self. Perhaps only the superheroes could have made sense of an accelerated, mediated world like this, but to a man, to a woman, they were gone, banished beyond the outer dark by their fearful adversaries.


  Soon, though, they would return to soar higher, faster, and farther than ever before. So high, so far, and so fast, in fact, that they had to start up a whole new age just to contain them…..”

 

Tuesday, 9 November 2021

Look Like



Imagine A Cave 

where those inside never see 

The Outside World.


Instead, they see 

shadows of that world 

Projected on The Cave Wall.


[MONKEY CHATTERING.]


The World They See 

in The Shadows is not 

The Real World.


Three, two, one, liftoff.


But it's Real to Them.


If you were to show Them 

The World as it actually is, 

They would reject it as incomprehensible.



Now what if, instead of being in A Cave, you were out in The World

except you couldn't see it.


[OVERLAPPING VOICES ON PHONE.]

Because You weren't Looking.


[PHONES CHIMING.]


Because You Trusted that The World You Saw through The Prism was The Real World.


[CLUCKING.]

[CAMERA CLICKS.]

[TYPING.]

[PHONE CHIMES.]

[TYPING.]


But there's A Difference.


[PHONE CHIMES.]


You see, unlike 

The Allegory of The Cave

where The People are Real 

and The Shadows are falsehere

Other People are The Shadows —

Their Faces.

Their Lives.


This is The Delusion 

of The Narcissist, 

who believes that 

They alone are Real.


- [PHONE CHIMING.]

- [TYPING.]

[PHONE CHIMES.]


Their feelings are the only feelings that matter because Other People are just Shadows, 

and Shadows Don't Feel.


Because They're 

Not Real.


[HORN HONKS.]


But what if everyone 

lived in caves? 


[LAPTOP CHIMING.]


Then no one would be Real.

Not even you.


Unless one day you woke up 

and left The Cave.


How strange The World would look 

after a lifetime of staring at Shadows.


[TYPING, PHONES CHIMING.]

[PHONE CHIMES.]



[THUNDER CRACKS.]

[THUNDER RUMBLING.]









“We end the Golden Age as it began, with Superman—one of the last survivors of the initial brief expansion and rapid contraction of the DC universe. It had been too much too soon for the superheroes, but although many of them would lie dormant for decades, no potential trademark truly dies. The superheroes, like cockroaches or Terminators, are impossible to kill. But in 1954 a sinister scientist straight from the pages of the comics tried to wipe them all out and came close to succeeding.


  As the lights went out on the Golden Age, characters such as Superman, Batman, and Wonder Woman, who’d achieved a wider recognition thanks to serials and merchandising, survived the cull. Because of their status as backup strips in Adventure Comics, second stringers like Green Arrow and Aquaman weathered the storm—perhaps undeservedly—but the survivors did not always flourish.


  For instance, a popular TV series (1953’s The Adventures of Superman) had cemented Superman’s status as an American icon, but budgetary restrictions meant that its star, the likeable but ultimately troubled George Reeves, was rarely seen in the air. At best, he might jump in through a window at an angle that suggested methods of entry other than flight, possibly involving trampolines. The stories revolved around low-level criminal activity in Metropolis and ended when Superman burst through another flimsy wall to apprehend another gang of bank robbers or spies. Bullets would bounce from his monochrome chest (the series was shot and transmitted before color TV, so Reeves’s costume was actually rendered in grayscale, not red and blue, which wouldn’t have contrasted so well in black and white.)

  Reeves, at nearly forty, was a patrician Superman with a touch of gray around the temples and a physique that suggested middle-aged spread rather than six-pack, but he fit the mold of the fifties establishment figure: fatherly, conservative, and trustworthy. The problem with Superman was more obvious in the comic books. By aping the kitchen-sink scale of the Reeves show, Superman’s writers and artists squandered his epic potential on a parade of gangsters, pranksters, and thieves. The character born in a futurist blaze of color and motion had washed up on a black-and-white stage set, grounded by the turgid rules of a real world that kept his wings clipped and his rebel spirit chained. Superman was now locked into a death trap more devious than anything Lex Luthor could have devised. Here was Superman—even Superman—tamed and domesticated in a world where the ceiling, not the sky, was the limit.




Monday, 4 October 2021

Taming









Andre Gregory :
“….And then one day, in the early fall...
I was out in The Country,
walking in a field...
and I suddenly heard 
A Voice say, "Little Prince".

Of course, The Little Prince
was a book that I always thought of
as disgusting, childish treacle.

But still, I thought, 
“Well, you know, if 
A Voice comes to me in a field --
-- this was the first voice 
I had ever heard --

-- Maybe I should go 
and read The Book.

Now, that same morning 
I'd got a letter from a young woman
who'd been in my group in Poland.

And in her letter she'd written,
"You have dominated me." --
--You know, she spoke very awkward English.
-- so, she'd gone 
to The Dictionary,
and she'd crossed out 
The Word "dominated"...
and she'd said, 
"No. The correct word 
is "Tamed".

And then, 
when I went to Town
and Bought The Book 
and started to read it, 
I saw that "taming" was 
The Most Important Word 
in The Whole Book.

By the end of the book, 
I was in tears
I was so moved 
by The Story.

And then I went and tried to write
An Answer to her letter 'cause 
she'd written Me a very long letter.

But I just couldn't find the right words
so finally I took my hand...
I put it on a piece of paper,
I outlined it with a pen...
and I wrote in the centre, something
like, "Your Heart is in My Hand."

....something like that.

Then I went over to 
my brother's house 
to swim 'cause he lives nearby 
in The Country and 
he has a pool.

And he wasn't home. 
I went into His Library...
and he had bought at an auction
the collected issues of Minotaure.

You know, the surrealist magazine? 
Oh, it's a great, great surrealist 
magazine of the '20s and '30s.

And I never, you know,
I consider myself 
a bit of a surrealist.

I had never, ever seen 
a copy of Minotaure.

And here they all were,
bound, year after year.

So, at random,
I picked one out, 
I opened it up...
and there was a 
full-page reproduction 
of the letter ‘A’ from 
Tenniel's Alice in Wonderland.

And I thought that, 'Well, you know,
it's been A Day of Coincidences...
but that's not unusual that 
The Surrealists would have 
been interested in Alice...
And I did A Play of Alice,

So at randomI opened to another page... 
and there were four handprints.

One was André Breton,
another was André Derain...
The Third was André - I've got it 
written down somewhere.

It's not Malraux
It's, like, someone...
Another of The Surrealists.

All A's, and the fourth
was Antoine de Saint-Exupéry
who wrote The Little Prince.

And they'd shown these handprints
to some kind of expert,
without saying whose 
hands they belonged to.

And under Exupéry'sit said that 
He was An Artist,
with very powerful eyes,
who was A Tamer 
of Wild Animals.

I thought, "This is 
incredible, you know."

And I looked back to see
when the issue came out :

It came out on the newsstands
May 12th, 1934...
and I was born during the day
of May 11,1934.

So, well, that's what started me on,
Saint-Exupéry and 
The Little Prince.

Now, of course today...
today I think there's a very fascistic 
thing under The Little Prince.

You know, I...
Well, no, I think 
there's a kind of...

I think a kind of S.S.-totalitarian
sentimentality in there somewhere.

You know, there's something
you know, that… that love of...
Well, that masculine love
of a certain kind 
of oily muscle.

You know what I mean?
I mean, I can't quite 
put my finger on it.

But I can just imagine
some beautiful S.S.-Man 
loving The Little Prince.

Now, I don't know why, but there's
something wrong with it. It stinks.

Wally Shawn :
Well, didn't George tell Me that You were gonna 
Do A Play that was based on The Little Prince?

Hmm. Well, what happened, Wally was 
that fall I was in New York and 
I met this young Japanese Buddhist priest 
named Kozan and I thought He was Puck 
from the Midsummer Night's Dream --

You know, he had this 
beautiful, delicate smile.

I thought He was 
The Little Prince.

So, naturally, I decided to 
go off to The Sahara Desert
to work on The Little Prince
with two actors and 
this Japanese monk.

Wally Shawn :
You did?

Well, I mean, I was still in 
a very peculiar state 
at that time, Wally.

Tuesday, 15 June 2021

Planet


“And The Apes went into The Forbidden Zone,
Abiding not by The Law, 
But by vain Curiosity for That Which Should Remain Unseen.

And The Prophecy of The Wise Ones was fulfilled,
When A Talking Man fell from The Skies,
To bring The End of Days.”

— Lawgiver, 68th. Scroll, Chapter I




"I was made merely in The Image of God, but not otherwise resembling Him enough to be mistaken for Him by anybody but a very near-sighted person. 

I believe that our Heavenly Father invented Man because he was disappointed in The Monkey."

— Mark Twain




Taylor has just taken his first shave since entering Interstellar Hibernation on his spaceship -- he now no longer resembles a caveman.


TAYLOR :
Do you like it?


LUCIUS :
Why did you do that?
Scrape off your hair?


TAYLOR :
In My World, when I left it,
only kids your age wore beards.


LUCIUS :
Beards? I don't go in for fads.


CORNELIUS :
Somehow... It makes you look less intelligent.






Well, you know What They Say :
"Human See, Human Do."



Dr. Zaius :

Have you forgotten your Scripture? 

The Thirteenth Scroll?

(quoting from memory)

'And Proteus brought the upright beast

into The Garden, and chained him to a tree,

and the children made sport of him.'


CORNELIUS

(impatiently)

No sir, I haven't forgotten.


ZAIUS

Well? For a time the ancients kept humans as household pets.

Until The Lawgiver proved that man could not be tamed. 

Keep digging Cornelius. 

You'll find evidence of The Master of This House: an ape.











326EXT. ARCHEOLOGICAL CAMP - ESTABLISHING SHOT - DAY


Sand bars and two narrow beaches are in evidence here. The camp itself

consists of several lean-tos against the cliff wall. Above the camp,

reached by ladders connected to scaffolding, is the mouth of a cave.

Zira is cleaning up the breakfast things; Zaius and Lucius are sorting

out equipment.


A-326CLOSER ANGLE - TAYLOR AND ZIRA


A small bowl of water rests on the ground in front of Taylor He has

nearly finished shaving himself with a sharp hunting knife. Nova

watches, a look of fascinated approval on her face. Taylor rinses off

his knife, starts to dry it. Nova reaches out, gently strokes his

smooth -- if nicked -- chin.


TAYLOR

(smiling)

You like it?


Lucius and Cornelius come up, Zira with them.


LUCIUS

(disapprovingly)

Why did you do that? Scrape off your

hair?


TAYLOR

In my world -- before I left it -

only youngsters of your age wore un-

scraped hair.


CORNELIUS

(to Taylor, quizzically)

It makes you look somehow ... less

intelligent.


Taylor grins wryly at Cornelius, picks up his rifle.


TAYLOR

When are you going to show me what's

in the cave?


CORNELIUS

Right now, if you like.


They cross the beach to the ladders, when suddenly they hear the sound

of horses. They look o.s.


B-326WHAT THEY SEE:


Dr. Zaius and five armed and mounted apes have come around the corner

of the beach and ride toward them through the rocks.


C-326MEDIUM - THE GROUP


Taylor scrambles up onto the lower scaffold. Lucius runs to a lean-to,

scoops up his rifle.


CORNELIUS

Lucius -- don't fire at them.


The party rides up.


ZAIUS

You're all under arrest!

(to Lucius)

You seditious scoundrel. Drop that

rifle.


327-OUT

348


349FLASH SHOT - LUCIUS


He wavers, lowering his piece.


350WIDER ANGLE - TO INCLUDE BOTH GROUPS


Zaius' gorillas ride forward a few paces, but halt again as Taylor

shouts:


TAYLOR

Stop right there.


ZAIUS

Don't be a fool. You're outnumbered

and outgunned.


Taylor aims at Zaius and calls out:


TAYLOR

If there's any shooting, Dr. Zaius,

you'll be the first to die. Depend

on it.


CORNELIUS

(protesting)

Taylor, you're not in command here.

Put down that gun.


TAYLOR

Shut up.


Silence.Zaius knows Taylor isn't bluffing.


ZAIUS

Very well.

(to his followers)

Lower your weapons.


They obey. Taylor calls again:


TAYLOR

(pointing)

Tell them to move around the point.

Out of range.


Zaius turns and whispers to his apes. They rein about and ride away

through the rocks. Zaius dismounts and approaches the fugitives alone.

He is unarmed.


351CLOSER ANGLE - THE GROUP


As Zaius draws nearer) Lucius lowers his rifle. But Taylor keeps his at

the ready.


CORNELIUS

(uncertainly)

How did you know we'd come here?


ZAIUS

It wasn't difficult. Only an apostate

or a lunatic would flee to the Forbidden

Zone.

(a glance at Taylor)

I see you brought along the female of

your species.

(Taylor nods)

I didn't realize a man could be monogamous.


TAYLOR

On this planet -- it's easy.


Zaius laughs derisively, then turns to the apes.


ZAIUS

(evenly)

I ask you to reconsider the rash course

you've taken. If you're convicted of heresy,

the most you'll get is two years. But if

you persist in pointing guns in my direction,

you'll hang for high treason.


CORNELIUS

(respectfully)

We've never meant to be treasonable, sir.

(pointing off)

But up there, in the face of that Cliff,

is a vast cave -- and in that cave a

fabulous treasure of fossils and artifacts.


ZAIUS

I've seen some of your fossils and artifacts.

They're worthless.


TAYLOR

(derisively)

And that's your Minister of Science. Honor-

bound to expand the frontiers of knowledge.


ZIRA

(worried)

Taylor, please --


TAYLOR

Except that he's also the Chief Defender

of the Faith.


ZAIUS

(loftily)

There is no contradiction between faith

and science. True science.


TAYLOR

(suddenly angered)

All right, let's see if you're willing

to put that statement to a test.


CORNELIUS

Taylor, I'd rather you -


TAYLOR

No. You saved me from this fanatic. Maybe

I can pay you back.


ZAIUS

(calmly)

What is your proposal?


TAYLOR

When were the Sacred Scrolls written?


ZAIUS

Twelve hundred years ago.


TAYLOR

Very well. If Zira and Cornelius can prove

that those scrolls don't tell the whole

truth of your history; if they can show you

definite evidence of another culture from an

unrecorded past -- will you exonerate them?


ZAIUS

Of course.


TAYLOR

Okay.Up to the cave.


He gestures toward the path leading to it. Zaius, Zira, and Cornelius

start upward. Lucius starts to follow them.


TAYLOR

Sorry, Lucius. You'll have to stay here

and guard the horses.


LUCIUS

Always giving orders. Just like every

other adult.


TAYLOR

Relax. You'll see it all later.


He pats the barrel of Lucius' gun, in the manner of a stern but

benevolent non-com, then starts up the trail with Nova at his heels.

Lucius, unused to taking commands from an animal, scowls after him,

then shrugs, adjusting to the Idea.


352-

355OUT


356 EXT. WESTERN WALL OF GORGE - LONG SHOT - ANGLING UP

AFTERNOON


The sun hovers over the lofty rim of the lake like a great red balloon.

The wall of the gorge, in shadow, is a darker hue.


357EXT. EASTERN WALL OF GORGE - LONG SHOT - ANGLING UP


The crenelated east wall, looking like a red cathedral, is aglow with

sunlight. So is the mouth of the cave as the three apes, Taylor and

Nova pass through it and o.s.


358INT. CAVERN - BOOM SHOT - DAY


Nature has formed a vaulted room here. It need not be enormous, but

should be as weird and fantastic as production capabilities permit.

There is an ape-made excavation in the floor of the cave, some ten feet

square and eight feet deep. Some small objects lie on the rim of the

excavation. Zaius, Cornelius, Zira, Taylor and Nova enter from the

outside.


(AUTHOR'S NOTE: The effect should be an eyeful. I wish to create an

illusion of sunlight penetrating this cave, flooding it with direct,

refracted illumination, transforming it into a kaleidoscopic cavern.)


ZAIUS

Present your evidence, Cornelius.


Cornelius clambers down into the pit, followed by Zira. Taylor bends

down, examines some of the artifacts lined along the edge of the

excavation. Nova sits beside him.


CORNELIUS

(pointing)

It was at this level I discovered traces

of an early ape creature -- stage of

primitive barbarism, really -- dating back

roughly thirteen hundred years. It was here

I found cutting tools and arrowheads of

quartz and the fossilized bones of

carnivorous gorillas.


CAMERA (ON BOOM) MOVES IN SLOWLY as Cornelius continues:


CORNELIUS

But the artifacts lying at your feet

were found here, at this level. And

that's the paradox. The more ancient

culture is the more advanced. Admittedly,

many of these objects are unidentified,

but clearly they were fashioned by beings

with a knowledge of metallurgy.


CAMERA KEEPS MOVING IN on the group in and around the excavation as

Cornelius continues:


CORNELIUS

Indeed, the very fact that these tools

are unknown to us could suggest a culture

in certain ways almost equal to our own.

Some of the evidence is uncontestable ...


ZAIUS

(interrupting)

Don't speak to me in absolutes. The

evidence is contestable.


CORNELIUS

I apologize.


ZAIUS

To begin with, your methods of dating

the past are crude, to say the least. There

are geologists on my staff who would laugh at

your speculations.


TAYLOR

Perhaps that's why they're on your staff.


Zaius flicks a hostile glance at Taylor, then looks down at the

artifacts. He nudges them with his foot.


ZAIUS

Secondly, if these 'tools' as you call

them, are unidentified, why are they

introduced as 'evidence' of anything?


ZIRA

(promptly)

But there's the doll, sir.


ZAIUS

What?


CORNELIUS

(pointing)

Right there. The human doll.


Zaius deigns to stoop and pick it up.


359CLOSE ON DOLL - IN ZAIUS' HAND


It is only a porcelain fragment, but the head is intact, and it is

unmistakably the form of a human child.


ZAIUS

What does this prove? My grand-

daughter plays with human dolls.


360FULL SHOT - THE EXCAVATION - INCLUDING TAYLOR


Exasperated, Zira turns to the man for confirmation.


ZIRA

Taylor! Tell him.


TAYLOR

He has a point. On my planet children

often play with ape dolls.


Zaius idly tosses the doll to the ground near Nova. She picks it up,

studies it.


361GROUP SHOT - THE THREE APES


Cornelius tries again.


CORNELIUS

A doll alone proves nothing. True. But

the doll was found beside the jawbone

of a man -- and no trace of simian fossils

has turned up in this deposit.


ZAIUS

Your conclusion is premature. Have you

forgotten your Scripture? The Thirteenth

Scroll?

(quoting from memory)

'And Proteus brought the upright beast

into the garden, and chained him to a tree,

and the children made sport of him.'


CORNELIUS

(impatiently)

No sir, I haven't forgotten.


ZAIUS

Well? For a time the ancients kept humans

as household pets.Until the Lawgiver

proved that man could not be tamed. Keep

digging Cornelius. You'll find evidence of

the master of this house: an ape.


A-361ANOTHER ANGLE - TO INCLUDE TAYLOR AND NOVA


As Zira again appeals to the man.


ZIRA

Are you going to let that pass without

an answer?


Taylor, who has been toying with objects in the dirt, looks up.


TAYLOR

Yes. I have to agree. From all you've

found so far, his position's as good as

yours.


CORNELIUS

(annoyed)

What are you doing there?


TAYLOR

Reconstructing a life. Care to have a

look?


Cornelius and Zira cross the pit and Zaius walks around the rim of the

excavation.


B-361MED. CLOSE SHOT - FAVORING TAYLOR AND NOVA


As the apes come close. A number of artifacts have been arranged in

front of Taylor.


TAYLOR

(to Cornelius)

These were found near the human doll,

right?

(Cornelius nods)

Well, whoever owned them was in pretty

bad shape.


He picks up the twisted fragment of a pair of spectacles.


TAYLOR

Defective eyesight..


As Taylor continues his monologue, he picks up the other objects one by

one.


TAYLOR

He wore false teeth.

(pause)

He suffered from a hernia and used

this truss to hold up his insides ...

(pause)

And toward the end, these little rings

of stainless steel enclosed a prefab-

ricated valve in his failing heart.


Taylor pauses. Zaius picks up two of the steel rings, studies them.


TAYLOR

I don't say he was a man like an Earthman,

but I'd call him a close relative, for

he was plagued by most of man's ills.

(to Zaius pointedly)

Yet, fragile as he was, he came before you

-- and was superior to you.


ZAIUS

(a calm smile)

That's lunacy. I can give an alternate

description for everyone of those objects

that's equally as inventive as yours. But

it would be conjecture, not proof.


362WIDER ANGLE - TO INCLUDE TAYLOR AND NOVA


She is poking her finger inside the decapitated head of the doll. From

it comes a distorted SOUND.


DOLL'S HEAD

Mamma! Mamma! Mamma!.


The apes stare at the doll in astonishment. Taylor snatches the doll

from Nova, brandishes it at the astonished Zaius.


TAYLOR

Dr. Zaius! Would an ape make a human

doll that talks?


Zaius looks at him, speechless. At that moment the CRACK of a distant

rifle shot reverberates through the cavern. All present freeze,

listening.


ZIRA

Lucius....


363-

364OUT


365FULL SHOT - THE CAVERN - REVERSE ANGLE


Taylor alone is armed. Raising his rifle, he glowers at Zaius.


TAYLOR

You louse!


Cornelius is already crossing the pit. He climbs out arid races toward

the mouth of the cave. Taylor runs after him. Zira and Nova hurry after

Taylor.


366MED. SHOT - ZAIUS


Expressionless, he looks down at the doll, then moves toward the mouth

of the cave.


367EXT. TRAIL FROM CAVE TO CAMP - ANGLING UP


Cornelius emerges from mouth of the cave and runs down the trail toward

CAMERA. He halts in f.g., looking down at:


368THE CAMP SITE - AS SEEN FROM THE TRAIL


Two of Zaius' gorillas have disarmed Lucius and are clubbing him with

their rifle butts. Two other mounted apes are driving the scientists'

horses back beyond the trees.


369EXT. THE TRAIL - AS SEEN FROM THE BEACH


Cornelius, Taylor, Nova and Zira (in that order) can be seen high

above, descending the trail. CAMERA PULLS BACK TO DISCLOSE A GORILLA

SNIPER in immediate f.g., crouching behind a boulder near the water. He

sights his rifle at the man on the trail. Taylor is still too distant

to make a sure target, and so the sniper waits.


370CLOSER ANGLE - TAYLOR ON THE TRAIL


This portion of the trail has no cover or concealment. Unaware of the

sniper, Taylor looks down at the camp as he makes his descent.


371LONG SHOT - TAYLOR - AS SEEN IN THE SNIPER'S SIGHTS


The gorilla fires.


372CLOSE SHOT - TAYLOR


The bullet ricochets off the rock wall a foot above his head. Taylor

scans the terrain bewlow, looking for the sniper. Nova comes to his

side, pointing at:


373THE SNIPER - FROM THEIR P.O.V.


His head is visible behind the boulder as he reloads his piece.


374FLASH SHOT


He aims and fires.


375FLASH SHOT - THE SNIPER


Taylor has missed him, but the sniper ducks behind the boulder.


376THE TRAIL - PANNING WITH TAYLOR AND NOVA


Taylor takes her hand and they race back up the trail to where Zira is

standing. Outcroppings of rock offer some cover here. Taylor pushes

Nova down behind a rock and signals for Zira to follow suit.


377CLOSE GROUP SHOT - TAYLOR, NOVA AND ZIRA


The sniper's SECOND SHOT rings out. Instead of returning the fire,

Taylor looks up the rail at:


378ZAIUS - FRO14 TAYLOR'S P.O.V.


He is standing impassively on the trail a short distance below the

mouth of the cave.


379FLASH SHOT - TAYLOR


Bent low, he comes charging up the trail toward Zaius. The sniper's

THIRD SHOT splatters rock fragments around him.


380REVERSE ANGLE - THE TRAIL - ANGLING UP


Zaius starts to retreat to the cave, but stumbles and falls on some

loose shale. No sooner has Zaius regained his feet than Taylor

overtakes him. Seizing the ape around the neck with his left arm.

Taylor drives the muzzle of his pistol into Zaius' kidney. He spins

Zaius around, using him as a shield.


381CLOSE TWO SHOT - ZAIUS AND TAYLOR


Taylor releases the pressure on Zaius' throat but keeps the gun pointed

at his back.


TAYLOR

Tell him to pull back!


ZAIUS

(a hoarse cry)

Cease fire! Withdraw!


His command echoes from the west wall of the canyon.


382LONG SHOT - THE FLOOR OF THE GORGE - FROM THEIR P.O.V.


The sniper emerges from behind a boulder near the shore, and walks off

along the beach.


383. BACK TO TAYLOR AND ZAIUS


Taylor lift's the muzzle of his rifle and presses it against the back

of Zaius' head.


TAYLOR

I ought to kill you right now.

(nudging him)

Let's go.


They move off down the trail.