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Planet of the Apes: Visionaries

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Planet of the Apes: Visionaries
Publication information
PublisherBoom! Studios
Publication dateAugust 2018
No. of issues1
Main character(s)Planet of the Apes
Creative team
Written byRod Serling (original screenplay)
Dana Gould
Artist(s)Chad Lewis
Letterer(s)Ed Dukeshire
Colorist(s)Darrin Moore
Miquel Mureto
Marcelo Costa

Planet of the Apes: Visionaries is a comic book based on the Rod Serling script for the first Planet of the Apes movie.[1][2]

Creation

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Planet of the Apes: Visionaries was based on Rod Serling's unused movie script of the 1968 Planet of the Apes movie.[3][4][5] This is the world you know from the acclaimed Planet of the Apes film series, but with key differences - Taylor is Thomas, and Ape City isn’t a crude, primitive grouping of huts; instead, it’s a bustling and urbane metropolis filled with cars and skyscrapers and a vibrant Ape culture. In a world where Apes wear modern clothes, drive modern cars and rule the late-night talk show scene, the arrival of one man will forever change how Apes – and Humans – view themselves.[6]

Publishing history

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Dark Horse Comics produced similar comics for Dan O'Bannon's original script for Alien and William Gibson's unproduced script for Alien 3 as part of the 20th Century Fox Uncovered line, which this comic was part of, from 2018 to 2020. Predator: The Original Screenplay was canceled mid-production due to the loss of the license.

Plot

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Human astronauts John Thomas, Paul LaFever and Dodge are in deep hibernation when their spaceship automatically lands on an unknown habitable planet after a light-speed voyage. They discover their 4th crew mate, a man named Stewart, dead due to a malfunction of his pod. The 3 survivors set off to explore the planet on an all-terrain vehicle, traveling through a desolate wasteland, until they discover a jungle, where they find eerie scarecrow-like figures and they're forced to abandon the vehicle when it sinks into quicksand. At a beach, they come across a tribe of primitive humans, following them back into the jungle where they're attacked by a group of gorilla and orangutans that use helicopters and jeeps.

The simian hunters shoot Dodge dead and Thomas is also injured and separated from Paul. Thomas awakens in a cell where other humans are kept and studied by chimpanzee scientists, Dr. Zira among these. Unable to speak, Thomas opens his wound and writes "I Can Speak" on the wall with his own blood, but is washed away when a gorilla guard uses a fire hose to punish an escaping human. Zira shares her fascination towards Thomas with her superior, the orangutan Dr. Zaius, who dismisses his unusual behavior as arrogant and plans to lobotomize him. Thomas makes an escape attempt by hiding in a supply truck and sees a modern Ape City, much like a city on Earth, but tailored to the simian society. He is believed to be an escaped trained human and is quickly recaptured and taken back to the lab.

Thomas manages to steal a notebook and writes messages to prove Zira his intelligence. Learning that there were others in his party, Zira phones Mr. Digby, the orang hunt leader, and takes Thomas to visit Paul, who has become incoherent and primitive after suffering a severe hit to the head. Zira presents her findings to a scientific assembly, but is met with skepticism from the apes and Zaius, who believes Thomas to be a well-trained human and orders a lobotomy. Rushing to the operating theater, Zira and Zaius witness Thomas' first words to an ape, as he is strapped to the operating table: "No! Leave. Me. ALONE." Thomas becomes a celebrity as a talking human and explains that he is from another planet called Earth and wishes to return to his planet. During his stay in the civilized Ape society, Thomas is appalled to see Dodge being turned into a stuffed museum exhibit, learns about a radioactive region and how Apes consider themselves evolved from humans. Thomas cracks this belief by befriending a primitive woman, Nova, who he teaches to stay upright, dress and even speak a few words within five weeks.

At an archaeological excavation site near the radioactive zone, Zaius joins Zira's fiancée Cornelius, the head of the expedition. Thomas arrives shortly afterwards on another helicopter having been invited by Cornelius, unbeknownst to Zaius. Cornelius shows that they have found human skeletons, before digging out a human doll that talks and discovering a shaft that leads to a room with more human skeletons laying in beds, revealing the whole thing to be a fallout shelter. Back in the Ape City, Paul (who was moved into the lab) has started to recover his senses and speaks, but is savagely beaten by 2 gorilla guards.

At the dig site, Thomas wakes to the sound of explosions and finds the site leveled. Cornelius and Thomas plan to go back to the landing site of the spaceship. As they are about to board a helicopter, the pilot attempts to shoot Thomas but gets shot instead before Thomas escapes alone on the helicopter. Some time later, Zira and Cornelius reach Thomas when he's back to his ship, where he has learnt that he has traveled in space for 2000 years and the spaceship can't take off. Zira tells him she has arranged for Nova to return to her own people. Thanking them for their concern, but refusing to heed their warnings that more apes will come for him, Thomas sets off on foot towards the jungle to join the wild humans.

Suddenly Zaius and gorilla military personnel catches up to Thomas, who runs briefly before stopping after seeing a gigantic object. Zira and Cornelius plead to Thomas to run, but he stands still and tearfully responds: "I'm afraid there's no place to run to. There's no place to go.", before Zaius ordered the gorillas to open fire and shoot him, either to death or to a pulp, either way leaving him there to his fate. Zira and Cornelius query why Thomas refused to flee, and as the apes leave the scene, the thing that Thomas saw and shattered him is revealed to be a destroyed Statue of Liberty, proof that the planet was a post-nuclear war Earth all along.

Reception

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Geek.com praised the book,[7] and so did the website FlickeringMyth.com.[8]

References

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  1. ^ "Rod Serling's 'Planet of the Apes' Script Inspires Graphic Novel (Exclusive)". The Hollywood Reporter. February 2018. Retrieved 15 January 2019.
  2. ^ "New Planet of the Apes Adaptation Revives Rod Serling's Original Screenplay". pastemagazine.com. February 2018. Archived from the original on 2020-03-01. Retrieved 15 January 2019.
  3. ^ Semel, Paul (August 21, 2018). "How Planet of the Apes Visionaries Graphic Novel Adapts Rod Serling's Unused Script". CBR.
  4. ^ Collura, Scott (August 30, 2018). "Planet of the Apes: Visionaries Offers a Glimpse at the Rod Serling Apes Movie That Could've Been". IGN.
  5. ^ "'Planet of the Apes Visionaries' Creators Dana Gould, Chad Lewis, and Dafna Pleban On the Challenge of Adapting Rod Serling's Screenplay". Comicbook.com.
  6. ^ Planet of the Apes Visionaries. 2018-08-28. ISBN 978-1-60886-980-0.
  7. ^ "Planet of the Apes: Visionaries is Unpredictable, Stunning and Wild". 3 September 2018. Archived from the original on 6 September 2018. Retrieved 15 January 2019.
  8. ^ "Comic Book Review - Rod Serling's Planet of the Apes: Visionaries". Flickering Myth. 21 August 2018. Retrieved 15 January 2019.