Menu
Planet of the Apes Poster

Planet of the Apes

Somewhere in the Universe, there must be something better than man!
1968 | 112m | English

(206951 votes)

TMDb IMDb

Popularity: 7 (history)

Details

Astronaut Taylor crash lands on a distant planet ruled by apes who use a primitive race of humans for experimentation and sport. Soon Taylor finds himself among the hunted, his life in the hands of a benevolent chimpanzee scientist.
Release Date: Feb 07, 1968
Director: Franklin J. Schaffner
Writer: Pierre Boulle, Michael Wilson, Rod Serling
Genres: Adventure, Action, Science Fiction, Drama
Keywords space marine, bondage, human evolution, based on novel or book, gorilla, dystopia, chimp, slavery, time travel, space travel, apocalypse, astronaut, ape, human subjugation, authoritarian, callous, demeaning, hopeful, mean spirited, apes
Production Companies 20th Century Fox, APJAC Productions
Box Office Revenue: $32,589,624
Budget: $5,800,000
Updates Updated: Feb 01, 2025 (Update)
Entered: Apr 13, 2024
Trailers and Extras

Full Credits

Name Character
Charlton Heston George Taylor
Roddy McDowall Cornelius
Kim Hunter Zira
Maurice Evans Dr. Zaius
James Whitmore President of the Assembly
James Daly Dr. Honorious
Linda Harrison Nova
Robert Gunner Landon
Lou Wagner Lucius
Woodrow Parfrey Dr. Maximus
Jeff Burton Dodge
Buck Kartalian Julius
Norman Burton Hunt Leader
Wright King Dr. Galen
Paul Lambert Minister
Martin Abrahams Human in Cage (uncredited)
Army Archerd Gorilla (uncredited)
James Bacon Ape (uncredited)
Erlynn Mary Botelho Gorilla (uncredited)
Priscilla Boyd Human #1 (uncredited)
Eldon Burke Gorilla (uncredited)
David Chow Chimpanzee (uncredited)
Billy Curtis Child Ape (uncredited)
Frank Delfino Child Ape (uncredited)
Buddy Douglas Child Ape (uncredited)
Chuck Fisher Gorilla (uncredited)
William Graeff Jr. Gorilla (uncredited)
Lars Hensen Gorilla (uncredited)
Irvin 'Zabo' Koszewski Gorilla (uncredited)
Norma Jean Kron Chimpanzee (uncredited)
Robert Lombardo Gorilla Photographer (uncredited)
Jerry Maren Child Ape (uncredited)
Cass Martin Chimpanzee (uncredited)
Stephan Merjanian Gorilla (uncredited)
Harry Monty Child Ape (uncredited)
John Quijada Gorilla (uncredited)
Smokey Roberds Chimpanzee (uncredited)
Dave Rodgers Gorilla (uncredited)
Jane Ross Human (uncredited)
George Sasaki Chimpanzee (uncredited)
Felix Silla Child Gorilla (uncredited)
Emory Souza Child Ape (uncredited)
Dianne Stanley Astronaut Stewart (uncredited)
Joe Tornatore Gorilla (uncredited)
Name Job
Franklin J. Schaffner Director
Jerry Goldsmith Original Music Composer, Compositor
Pierre Boulle Novel
Ben Nye Makeup Artist
Lightning Bear Stunts
Kim Kahana Stunts
Michael Wilson Screenplay
Rod Serling Screenplay
Terry Leonard Stunts
Eddie Hice Stunts
Nick Dimitri Stunts
George P. Wilbur Stunts
Ted White Stunts
Loren Janes Stunts
Gene LeBell Stunts
Tony Epper Stunts
Louie Elias Stunts
Kent Hays Stunts
Leon Shamroy Director of Photography
Hugh S. Fowler Editor
Joe Scully Casting
William J. Creber Art Direction
Jack Martin Smith Art Direction
Norman Rockett Set Decoration
Walter M. Scott Set Decoration
Morton Haack Costume Design
William Kissell Assistant Director
Johnny Borgese Special Effects
Joe Canutt Stunt Coordinator
Irving Rosenberg Camera Operator
David Dockendorf Sound
William Eckhardt Unit Production Manager
L.B. Abbott Visual Effects
Art Cruickshank Visual Effects
Eve Newing Hairstylist
Robert Doudell Assistant Director
Herman Lewis Sound
Emil Kosa Jr. Visual Effects
Robert Fuca Assistant Costume Designer
Steve Bonner Driver
Chris Haynes Driver
Rose Steinberg Script Supervisor
Frank Orsatti Stunts
Chema Hernández Other
Tap Canutt Stunts
John Chambers Makeup Designer
Fred Hall Gaffer
Jack Tyree Stunts
Alex Sharp Stunts
Ernest Robinson Stunts
Glenn Randall Jr. Stunts
Robert Renegade Renneke Stunts
Roy N. Sickner Stunts
Dave Rodgers Stunts
John Quijada Stunts
Lars Lundgren Stunts
Regis Parton Stunts
Whitey Hughes Stunts
Fritz Ford Stunts
William Graeff Jr. Stunts
Bennie E. Dobbins Stunts
Eldon Burke Stunts
Vernon Archer Special Effects
Bill Clove Special Effects
Marlin Jones Special Effects
Margaret Donovan Hair Supervisor
Verne Langdon Special Effects Makeup Artist
Alexander Courage Orchestrator, Music
Name Title
Arthur P. Jacobs Producer
Mort Abrahams Associate Producer
Organization Category Person
Popularity Metrics

Popularity History


Year Month Avg Max Min
2024 4 93 140 63
2024 5 190 309 98
2024 6 111 167 67
2024 7 86 126 55
2024 8 71 105 48
2024 9 49 69 36
2024 10 53 102 32
2024 11 50 85 31
2024 12 45 58 33
2025 1 49 70 37
2025 2 44 59 9
2025 3 11 48 3
2025 4 9 15 5
2025 5 8 16 6
2025 6 7 12 6
2025 7 6 7 4
2025 8 6 7 5
2025 9 8 10 7

Trending Position


Year Month High Avg
2025 7 938 938
Year Month High Avg
2025 5 529 777
Year Month High Avg
2025 4 387 726
Year Month High Avg
2025 3 201 592
Year Month High Avg
2025 2 71 620
Year Month High Avg
2025 1 156 578
Year Month High Avg
2024 12 336 700
Year Month High Avg
2024 11 251 726
Year Month High Avg
2024 10 343 645
Year Month High Avg
2024 9 179 551
Year Month High Avg
2024 8 204 530

Return to Top

Reviews

tmdb29300086
N/A

*SPOILERS BELOW* I frst saw this film on its first run on CBS. I was in junior high and a hard core sci-fi fan. I was hooked from the first scene. Written by the late great Rod Serling based on the novel by Pierre Boulle, the story is very engaging. After we are introduced to an ANSA Mission Comm ... ander named Colonel Taylor, we are treated to a roller-coaster type sequence as we see the re-entry and crash of Taylor's ship subjectively; as if we were aboard her. The abandon ship scenes are still impressive even by today's standards. It's very easy to believe we are seeing a real spacecraft crashed in the water. The next sequence basically establishes Taylor's personality. To be blunt, he is an arrogant jerk. He mentions hoping to find something better than Man. In a literal casr of "Be careful what you wish for", he spends the rest of the film trying to prove the opposite. After he and his two crew members encounter a tribe of wild, mute humans, the sci-fi element takes on a horror flavor as a terrifying horn sounds. We are then introduced to the higher lifeforms of the planet which happen to be apes. The hunting sequences are both exciting and disturbing. As we are familiarized with the film's antagonists, we get a bit of comedy relief as we hear Julius, the zoo-keeper say "Human see, human do" The simian characters are all wonderfully written and acted. I had heard many times about the ending, but actually seeing Miss Liberty half buried and weathered like that was still a shock. CBS edited Heston's agonized reaction to merely "DAMN YOU!!". I didn't hear the uncut version until I rented it on VHS about 2 decades later when I got my first VCR. The new Apes films are well made but I will always prefer this one. I highly recommend it if you haven't seen it.

Jun 23, 2021
John Chard
10.0

I'm a seeker, too. But my dreams aren't like yours. I can't help thinking that somewhere in the universe there has to be something better than man. Has to be. Planet of the Apes is directed by Franklin J. Schaffner and adapted to screenplay by Michael Wilson and Rod Serling from the 1963 Pierre B ... oulle novel La planete des singes. It stars Charlton Heston, Roddy McDowall, Kim Hunter, Maurice Evans, James Whitmore, James Daly and Linda Harrison. Music is scored by Jerry Goldsmith and Leon Shamroy is the cinematographer. 3978 A.D. and a spaceship and its crew crash down on a distant planet. Three astronauts survive the crash, they appear to be on a planet not unlike their own, Earth. But soon they come to learn that this planet is ruled by intelligent apes, the human being is the lesser species, mute and of basic intelligence.. It was a tough sell to studios back in the 1960s, not only was the premise that formed Pierre Boulle's novel a tricky one, but the technical aspects, cost and quality of, also had the men in suits backing away from producer Arthur P. Jacobs and beefcake actor Charlton Heston. Eventually Dick Zanuck over at Fox nervously agreed to make it as long as significant tests ensured that farce would not follow. Stumping up $50,000 for John Chambers to develop the ape make up and masks, and a successful test run acted out by Edward G. Robinson as Dr Zaius opposite Heston, Planet of the Apes was given the green light. The script went through a number of changes as Serling and Wilson tossed around ideas to improve on Boulle's page turner, while Heston himself felt that the novel as written was unfilmable. Elsewhere, when director Schaffner came on board, he himself went for a more primitive ape world as opposed to the one under consideration that featured futuristic high rises and super advanced technology. What came out at the end of it all thankfully is one of the greatest sci-fi movies of all time. What would follow the success of the film is well known, a number of inferior sequels, a TV series, a remake and even a prequel in 2011. Then of course there was the toys, models, comics, cartoons and T shirts - it at times felt in the 70s that there really was a Planet of the Apes, only this one was driven by commerce. The aftermath of the original film has not done it any favours, the lines have become blurred, with so much muck and tack about, it often gets forgotten just how clinically great Schaffner's movie is. If ever there was a film that deserves to be a standalone, this is the one. Follow Heston's brawny Taylor from the pitiful planting of the stars and stripes at the beginning, to that monumental ending, and then leave it at that, do not pass go, do not venture further into any sort of monkey business. No sequel necessary, for Planet of the Apes to truly hit you with maximum impact, it all needs to end right there on that shoreline. As the great Rod Serling intended in fact. Thematically the picture is acknowledged as being caustically strong, a sociological allegory, with pinches of racial animus just for flavouring. It might be under the guise of a sci-fi movie, but the makers aren't trying to hide it. Whilst the narrative twitches with comment, whoosh was that an aside to the Scopes trial? Film is also full of visceral thrills, pop-culture references and unnerving (alienation like) photographic beauty. The former comes with the hunt sequence, where we first meet gorilla's on horses, with guns and attitude, the latter with Shamroy's Panavision/De Luxe colour lensing of the California and Arizona locations. All enhanced by Goldsmith's aural pinging percussive led score. And while we continue to remember some of those famous bits of dialogue, we also pick up on each revisit to the film those little slices of humour slotted into the story - human see, human do indeed and the visual cheek of hear no evil, see no evil, speak no evil... Film of course hinges on Heston's central human performance, of which he delivers athletic guts and subtle nuances in equal measure. Taylor's character arc demands repeat viewings to fully appreciate what Heston brings to the role. Take in the cynical Taylor who wanders through the Forbidden Zone in the first quarter, then marry it up to the Taylor fighting for his life in the middle, and finally to the Taylor at the denouement, it's a three pronged acting turn of some undervalued distinction. Not all muscular "presence" actors are/were able to be credible, Heston was. Around him in the monkey suits are true professionals, Hunter, McDowall, Evans (coming in for Robinson who feared for is health in the suit) and Whitmore, while Harrison in the non speaking human role of Nova does her job of looking gorgeous! All that's left to say is that Schaffner, who would win the Academy Award for Best Director two years later for Patton, pulls it all together neatly. 10/10

May 16, 2024
nutshell
10.0

A sci-fi film so groundbreaking (in too many ways to list here) let's suffice it to say that everything that came after it owes the film a debt as large as Kubrick's 2001, also made in '68. Anyone who enjoyed the recent reboot trilogy needs to seek this one out. ...

Jun 23, 2021
DanDare
9.0

The writers turned a not very good novel into an allegory on race and religion. It also takes an nuclear stance which makes an impact in its finale. Charlton Heston is Taylor. An astronaut, part of a crew of four on a long term space mission. They crash landed in what looks like a deserted ... planet. Soon they encounter some hunter/gatherer human beings who do not speak. Then he finds apes on horseback who speak English. The apes treat the humans like animals. Taylor is injured by the apes and is unable to speak at first. A female ape who is a zoologist is shocked when Taylor speaks. The other apes see him as a threat. Taylor being able to talk and think is against what the apes have been taught. The answer lies in the forbidden zone as to what happened to the humans. The movie raises issues regarding race relations, the treatment of animals and adherence to holy texts. This is a powerful film famous for its twist ending.

Jun 23, 2021
r96sk
8.0

Having seen all three films from the rebooted series, I came into watching the original series expecting something relatively similar. To my pleasant surprise, it's a very different story. It's a fascinating dynamic that is set up in this version, which I in fact prefer compared to the films from ... the 2010s - as entertaining as they are in their own right. It's nicely paced and features good cinematography. The cast of 1968's <em>'Planet of the Apes'</em> are very good. Charlton Heston, as you might expect, sticks out the most, but Roddy McDowall, Kim Hunter and Maurice Evans are good too. Everyone else is solid, as well. The effects haven't aged amazingly, for example the ape make-up/costumes are dated and clunky - particularly when the characters are speaking. That's all forgivable of course, given the release year. It's all still effective, either way. 8/10 - very close to being 9/10 in truth.

Feb 25, 2022
Geronimo1967
7.0

It seems that this film is almost as famous for the folks who didn't take part - Marlon Brando, Edward G. Robinson, Steve McQueen and even Ingrid Bergman, as for it's achievements as a thought provoking piece of cinema. I have always found that Charlton Heston's delivery tended a touch to theatrical ... monologue; but it really does work in this existential sci-fi story. Returning from a space voyage to Earth several thousand years after they left, the crew discover a planet (they are not even sure which one) ruled over by apes with their own sophisticated, hierarchical, though still agrarian, society. Heston is soon captured but luckily falls under the protection of two curiously-minded scientists "Zira" (Kim Hunter) and "Cornelius" (Roddy McDowell) who suspect that there is much more to their societal beginnings than are oft quoted in the sacred scriptures by "Dr. Zaius" (Maurice Evans). The juxtapositioning of ape and man make for some quite funny scenarios and over 50 years later it still poses some relevant questions about man's assumptions and behaviour towards the rest of life on our world.

Jun 03, 2023
moard
N/A

Dramatic and adventurous The Planet of the Apes (1968) is a fantastic movie that delivers a real experience to the viewer. There is no excuse for anyone not to enjoy this movie. Taylor and his friends land in the spaceship in a land ruled by damn dirty apes. If you haven’t seen this, it’s shamef ... ul. 9-10.

Nov 21, 2023