Monday, 3 August 2015
191 Planet of the Apes
First watched : 1974
Over to ITV now for this adventure series based on the film franchise ( probably the first to enter my consciousness ). Discussions about a TV series began in 1971, the year of the third film in the franchise Escape from the Planet of the Apes but stalled as the audience fell away with its sequels. After the pretty dire Battle for the Planet of the Apes premiered in 1973 the series' producer died and his company sold all rights to 20th Century Fox. They sold TV rights to the first three films on to CBS who immediately broadcast them to high ratings. This gave a green light to development of the TV series.
The premise of the series goes back to the first film with two astronauts Virdon and Burke crashlanding on the earth of the future where apes rule the roost. The relatively liberal Zaius - the only character lifted directly from the films although the bone-headed general Urko is pretty much identical to Ursus from the second film - wants to study them but his acolyte Galen, played by the faithful Roddy McDowall, breaks loose and goes on the run with the two humans.
From that point on it's pretty much Alias Smith and Jones accompanied by a man in a monkey suit as the two fugitives roam around the semi-civilised planet chased by Urko and solve the problems posed by various guest stars while trying to find a way out of their predicament.
Poor ratings in the US put an end to it after 13 episodes although it was very popular here and gave rise to a brand of crisps and a Marvel comic which I bought for a while until it interrupted its adaptation of the fourth film without warning in favour of a densely written piece of fan fiction ( and not from the beginning either ) and I abandoned it in disgust.
Neither Ron Harper nor James Naughton became household names after the series although the latter has been notably more successful with a couple of Tony Awards and character parts in some big films such as The Devil Wears Prada. No one from the series was involved in the 2001 film reboot, McDowall having died three years earlier.
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