Wednesday, September 5, 2012

Planet of the Apes: Comprehending the Loss of Humanity in the Information Age



 This is a pretty long essay - feel free to skim and let me know what you think!





  Introduction
The film Rise of the Planet of the Apes (2011) is ultimately asking one of the age-old questions of meaningful art and literature, "what does it mean to be human?" In the case of this film, and the contemporary timing of its release, the further question can be added, "what does it mean to be human in the age of information and globalization?" As the film wrestles with these big questions, the spectator is led by the plot through a series of broken relationships caused by the tragic over-zealous pursuit of intangible happiness. The theme of the film emerges in the idea that one's humanity is defined by the sum combination of one's actions and motives.

Analyzing Apes through the lens of David Bordwell's cognitive film language theory (2009) is helpful to understanding both the process in which the spectator is guided through the film and how the comprehension of theme and plot are created in the mind of the spectator in relation to what is seen. The key aspects of Bordwell's theory that are most helpful for this study are his terms of film language (i.e. "gist" "schema" and "cues"), which will be explored later. By using Bordwell's film language terms and theory of cognition, the value of Rise of the Planet of the Apes can be seen as an important commentary on what it means to be human in the global economy and age of information. In many ways the theoretical approach reveals that in the film humans have lost the ability to maintain "human" relationships and a seeming beast becomes a better human than those around him. This is done through the identification and sympathy the spectator experiences with Caesar, the Computer Generated Image (CGI) chimpanzee and tragic hero of the film. This value statement, along with the theme of action and motive-based humanity will be explored after first reviewing Bordwell's theory and concepts, and then a summary of the film's plot.
David Bordwell's Cognitive Theory of Comprehension
In his essay, Cognition and Comprehension: Viewing and Forgetting in Mildred Pierce. David Bordwell illustrates his theory, which is rooted in what he describes as the cognitive method of understanding how spectators gain meaning from film. For Bordwell and others like him, understanding film does not rely on semiotic codes or psychoanalytic unconscious but on a “complex process of actively elaborating what the film sets forth” (428). They ‘go beyond the information given’” (428) using the analytical measures that one uses in every day life though one is "not aware of doing so - it's a nonconscious activity" (429). These measures are contained in Bordwell's terms of cues, gists, and schemas.

In an example to explain what these terms mean, Bordwell illustrates a scene in which a car drives down the road and approaches another car pulled over with a man opening the trunk. "Presented with a set of circumstances (flat tire, man opening trunk), you categorize it (driver changing flat tire) and draw an informal, probabilistic conclusion, based on a structured piece of knowledge about what is normally involved in the activity" (429 italics added). This immediate cognition and assumption may lead one to extract a gist. In other words, a spectator of such a scene may "transform the scene into gist - the basic action that occurs, and its consequences for the characters and the ensuing action - becomes a basis for more complex inferential elaboration." If the man opening the trunk is tall, wearing a black trench coat, and the car appears to be from the 1920's - than the gist of the spectator may be related to gangsters, prohibition, or a murder. To form a gist one is simply categorizing a scene and drawing an informal conclusion of the outcome of that scene.

The gist is largely affected by the cues of the creator of the scene. Bordwell feels that "it makes sense to postulate that filmmakers - scriptwriters, producers, directors, editors, and other artisans of the screen - build their films in ways that will coax most of their spectators to follow the same inferential pathways" as themselves. " He believes that theorists ought to look for the manner in which films are designed to elicit the sorts of cognizing activities that will lead to comprehension (429). Thus cues can be seen as purposeful plot points, actors, music motifs, props, and other elements of film that lead a spectator to form gists that direct to the desired "inferential pathways" the film makers have intended for the spectator. However, for these cues to be relevant the spectator must have a sufficient schema to understand the direction the cues are leading them.

"A schema is a knowledge structure that enables the perceiver to extrapolate beyond the information given" (430). A schema is like a paradigm or perspective that a spectator may develop that enables them to understand how filmic elements operate, or have operated in the past. These schemas then allow the spectator to be led from gist to gist down the inferential pathway the filmmaker has created through the placement of cues. Bordwell explains, "The spectator for a Hollywood film is able to understand that a space is coherent because at some level of mental activity, she or he possesses a schema for typical locales, such as living rooms or pool halls . . . he or she must possess some rudimentary notion of narrative structure that permits certain information to be taken for granted and other information to be understood as, say, exposition or an important revelation" (430).

Cues, gists, and schemas, along with Bordwell's thoughts on cognition and spectators extrapolating beyond the information given in film is a very helpful framework when looking at The Rise of the Planet of the Apes. This film is a reboot of a well-known series that carries with it a distinct set of expectations of cynicism towards humanity (a schema in its own right).  As well as subtle cues that lead to significant understanding about the theme and impact of the film in our global society. Understanding and viewing the text using Bordwell's theory of cognition adds to the comprehension of how the filmmakers created a believable emotional reality. This emotional reality is engaging and the CGI is real enough that viewers are enabled to enter this different form of reality to see the world through the eyes of an ape who ultimately becomes a victim of circumstance and the tragic hero of the film.

Summary and Plot of The Rise of the Planet of the Apes
Understanding the plot and characters of the film is essential when applying Bordwell's theory of cognition. While the following summary should not be considered fully comprehensive, it is of note that events in the plot that strengthen the emotional realities and Caesar's dynamic character can be seen as evidences to the fact that the film makers have created a series of cues to lead the spectator through the action. This movement down the inferential pathway leads to the theme discussed earlier in this paper - namely that humanity is created through one's actions and motivations. (go to Wikipedia for a summary if you haven't seen the film)

Contextualizing the evidence and so what?
Now that Bordwell’s theory has illuminated the context of the argument in this paper, a review of the thesis is helpful. Ultimately what can be found in combining the theory and text at hand is that the theme of the film emerges in the idea that one's humanity is defined by the sum combination of one's actions and motives. The film creates an emotional reality and humanization of Caesar through the use of gists, cues, and schemas that humanize the chimp’s relationships to humans and his fellow apes. How do the filmmakers do this? This question will be explored in this section by examining the presentation of Caesar’s character arc through Bordwell’s elements of film language; the beginning, middle, and end; and how Caesar’s development and choices that led to a greater ideal of humanity than his human counter parts.

As noted in the summary of the film, the first impression of Caesar is as an orphaned chimp with the prospect of being murdered. This is the first moment of cognition the spectator is given for Caesar's character, and it can be clear that the filmmakers are aiming to lead the spectator down the path of inference that the chimp is helpless, and without aid it will die. Franco’s decision to keep the chimp and raise him in his father’s house (an obvious plot point to those that have picked up on the cue) leads to a series of events in which the loving and innocent chimp is exposed to pain and sorrow. Andy Serkis, the actor who played Caesar while wearing motion capture sensors made the following observation about Caesar’s upbringing and beginning.
…You do see his journey from being, how he responds to brutalization and witnessing brutalization and bullying and all these shocking things because he’s brought up as an innocent. He’s quite innocent and you see his journey from innocence into moments of realizing that actually it can be a cruel world out there. And he has been brought up because Will, James Franco’s character and John Lithgow’s character, they’re incredibly humanitarian. He’s been brought up in a loved family. In a way you’ve got to forget that he’s a chimp, you treat him as a child whose been brought up in a loving environment then suddenly being subjected to brutalization and seeing, when they go to the Ape Sanctuary, it could be any institution which has bullying and mistreatment and some kind of person who is dominating and subjugating other people. So you will feel sympathy because you will see how this young mind is witnessing brutalization (Serkis & Notary).
Serkis’ description of how the spectator forgets Caesar is a chimp, and sees him more as a child is an example of how the filmmaker’s cues are being accepted. As the spectator accepts the concept that they can identify with the chimp as the main character and point of attention, than they will continue to develop the correct gists and cultivate schemas that will lead them understanding the theme. Caesar is a victim of circumstance, and any active spectator can sympathize with his need for acceptance and place. The natural desire the cues lead the spectator towards is a wish to change Caesar’s surroundings. However this desire only increases in the scene in which the chimp hurts the man yelling at Franco’s dad. Ironically the ape is reprimanded for a humane feeling expressed in a savage way and is sentenced to savage treatment with no humane feeling in the prison like compound.

The middle section of Caesar’s character arc begins with the chimp’s recognition of his own intelligence and inferiority to humans. Rather than submitting and getting in the trunk, Caesar gets into the back seat of the car like a human. His hate of being “different” is later funneled into a sort of craftiness that guides him to become the leader of the pack, and eventually rejecting his innocence. Terry Notary, the actor that worked closely with Serkis in the development of the ape characters thoughtfully discusses Caesar’s descent into the angry chimp that he becomes.
That’s the strength of this film I think is that it’s a very good script and each of the characters in the film, the apes, are individuals. They’re unique and they come from a different background. Some have been tortured for years and some are ex-circus chimps and they all have a personality, and a trait and a strength that comes together and makes this team that is led by Caesar and once they are genetically enhanced, it’s almost as if this bright eyed innocence is changed and they start to become thinking and more human and you see that the more human they become, the less innocent they are. And it’s sad but you’re rooting for them at the same time but they are losing this innocence by becoming more human so there’s a lot of messages in there about humanity and where we’re going (Serkis & Notary).

At this point the spectator, perhaps without realizing it, is doing exactly what Notary describes: rooting for the apes. The spectator, if appropriately cognizing the path from the gists and cues the filmmakers have set while also maintaining an understanding schema, begins to identify more with the apes than with the human beings. This phenomenon points to the fact that Caesar has become a hero and also the villain (in that he ultimately is putting the world at risk of complete destruction through the use of the lethal drug). A better description of the chimp’s role is that he is a tragic hero, and his flaw is that he is a misunderstood creature that is biologically different than mankind. As he accepts his differences, erases the window or eye of man that has been symbolically etched on his cell wall, and reacts to the events around him in resistance, it is clear that he is justified. Caesar's feelings that man has failed him and his decision to escape resonate with the humane spectator in a way that makes the prospects of the climax of the film even more complex. Notary’s insights are troublingly truthful; the apes are losing innocence by becoming more human. Perhaps being human, and participating in this world requires a certain degree of love, trust, and connectedness that Notary calls “innocence.” Perhaps humans have degraded these terms to the point that one is considered a child or like a chimp if they can’t let go of these traits. Such thoughts and possible themes only come when a spectator navigates the cues set by the filmmakers.
As the end of the film unfolds, the cue-following spectator is led to an unforeseen outcome. The tragic hero escapes and unlike the ancient ruler of the same name, Caesar the chimp is able to overcome his flaws by revealing the flaws of humanity around him. In this regard he is like Romulus, leaving Franco his foster dad and his orphaned life to form the next great empire to take over the world. Franco and Caesar’s friendship is over, but not with enmity or bad feelings. Rather, Franco has recognized tragic flaws of his own. Franco explains his perspective of the arch of his own character.
So I guess my character just goes from a pure science orientated man who has few connections in life, it’s actually a pretty dismal existence, who doesn’t have much of a relationship with his father and his father has Alzheimer’s so he then starts taking care of him and at the end of his father’s life . . . he starts building this relationship with his father that he never had. And then this chimp is thrust on him, so he starts having almost a father son relationship that he never had in his life. So he goes from a very isolated, scientific, cold kind of personality to a much more humane and caring person (2011).

Franco's obsessive dabbling in technology, inability to deal with the natural human process of mortality, and his over-all greed in thinking he can get what he wants with enough money are all traits that can represent flaws of mankind. Human beings have failed to preserve good over evil and humane relationships have fallen below greed and power. Franco loses his own role as a father to Caesar and instead becomes the father of the pandemic that is displayed in the graphics during the closing screen credits. His choices and actions, though often well intentioned, render him responsible for the end of humanity. James Franco, in reflecting on the character he played explains, "I guess he screws a lot of things up. Not on purpose but he does everything for the right reasons, it just gets out of hand" (Franco 2011). Who then is more humane, the man or the ape? The disturbing answer is clear to the spectator who has followed the cues of the filmmaker and identified with the CGI ape as the tragic hero of the story who comes off conqueror. The ape’s actions and motivations present him a more accurate and ideal human than the majority of his human counter-parts.


Conclusion
Because the topic of human nature, what it means to be a human in the current age of information and obsession with technology, and the richness of the film Rise of the Planet of the Apes, not all aspects that may be applicable or helpful in using Bordwell’s theory can be discussed in this paper. There are many other concepts and insights that can be had and explored by applying the theory of cognition. One example is the schema many spectator’s hold when approaching a reboot of a classic franchise and how that schema changed or didn’t change in the viewing of the film. Another insight that could be explored further using Bordwell's theory in Apes is the use of actors such as Tom Felton (played Draco Malfoy in the Harry Potter films) and Brian Cox (played antagonist roles in The Bourne series, and X2) and how the cue of their well known evil characters from other films utilizes melodrama in Apes. And yet another topic that deserves additional attention is the stark photorealistic reality implemented in the film through groundbreaking technologies and how this reality influences spectator's suspension of disbelief and identification with the main character. Though these topics are worthwhile and have not been discussed in this paper, by understanding and mapping out some of the basic elements of Bordwell’s film language and theory of cognition in the film Rise of the Planet of the Apes, active and interested spectators can draw a much larger meaning from the film that reveal the overarching theme which we have seen. Rather than passively soaking in a summer blockbuster, movie goers and scholars alike can understand that to become a more humane human, what counts is the sum total of one’s actions and motivations. The accomplishment of this film is that this theme is shared through the catalyst of an ape – which out smarts the whole of the human race to begin a new empire in the world of his flawed captors.

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Bordwell, David. "Cognition and Comprehension: Viewing and Forgetting in Mildred Pierce." 2009. Ed. Leo Braudy and Marshall Cohen. Film Theory and Criticism: Introductory Readings. 7th ed. New York: Oxford UP, 2009. 427-44. Print.

Franco, James. "James Franco On-Set Interview RISE OF THE PLANET OF THE APES." Interview by Germain Lussier. Collider.com. 14 Apr. 2011. Web. 15 Nov. 2011. <http://collider.com/james-franco-on-set-interview-rise-of-the-planet-of-the-apes/85819/>.

Serkis, Andy, and Terry Notary. "Andy Serkis and Terry Notary On-Set Interview RISE OF THE PLANET OF THE APES." Interview by Germain Lussier.Collider.com. 14 Apr. 2011. Web. 15 Nov. 2011. <http://collider.com/andy-serkis-terry-notary-interview-rise-of-the-planet-of-the-apes/85810/>.

Wikipedia. "Rise of the Planet of the Apes." Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Web. 19 Nov. 2011. <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rise_Of_The_Planet_Of_The_Apes>.

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