How Real Planet of the Apes Movies?

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Viewing the Rise of the Planet of the Apes was an intellectual delight of topical issues and a throwback to my childhood. Seeing it seems like 5 or so movies of this brand as a youth was a fascinating and exciting critique of the brutality of mankind shown most entertainingly. The current prequel now showing looks kindly to the human parents and the need for medicine research. All too many mental health consumers can be likened to being used for medicine research by a profession that doesn't know how it's medicines work. The value of the portrayed medicine to my movie sidekick who is my mother is as real to me as what I get prescribed for me. Gaining greater stability and increasing range of emotion to go along with enhanced intelligence that I feel psychiatry medicines can do for the disabled is worth animal experimentation to this environmentalist.

As an elected official in education I'd advocate the character education advantages of a good boy-and-"his"-mountain lion story as an empathy tear jerker as a guessed suggestion for the classroom. This Apes movie is better for pointing out empathy for the splitting point of a parent who couldn't protect his young as honestly as the ape Caeser enjoyed freedom with his own kind. That scene shed my emotions.

As far as my San Francisco experience goes as a Woolworth Assistant manager, we would have rooted for the apes if one of them talked. The animal keeper was an ass. The public safety crew was just doing its job that it had to do. The police shooting the side of a bus which was toppled in a rampage in the movie was reminiscent of the actual Supervisor Milk riots, which by happening at night was pretty terrifying to those teenagers of us up North of the Bridge back then. The modern day movie was Just a fantastic science fiction tale that felt fact-based and greatly human.