That's sort of close to the original plot. In "Conquest of the Planet of the Apes", a disease kills off the world's cats and dogs, so humanity begins domesticating monkeys and apes as household pets. The apes develop an amazing capacity to learn and adapt, to the point that they're eventually transformed over time into a slave class servile to a newly fascist America. They even have prisons and correctional facilities for the more rowdy apes, orange jumpsuits and everything.dyre said:I haven't seen the trailer or read anything about the movie (or seen the original), but I'm guessing the apes didn't defeat the humans in war (yeah, that'd be retarded), but more likely the humans were brought to near-extinction by some disease or w/e that the apes were unaffected by.
This may just be nostalgia talking, but I preferred the original series to the new movies coming out. Sure, they were just as silly as this new one looks but at least they were more plausible. In the original, they were a slave caste taught how to use human technology and bred en masse to fulfill their role as servants and workers. In essence, they could foster revolution, use guns and radios, and covertly sabotage the humans that waged war on them yet depended on them for labor. In this new one, monkeys and apes from zoos and laboratories break loose and start hitting soldiers with modern guns AND tanks with clubs. Besides Africa and South America, where would they possibly pose a real threat? Even if they did somehow manage to take over entire cities and wage gorilla warfare (lol) successfully against our military, last I checked they couldn't swim. Wouldn't islands and Australia be safe? This was demonstrated in the old and new movies, and they certainly couldn't use large ships or airplanes seeing how the height of their transport technology in both series was still horse dependent.
Edit: DAMN! Ninja'd by Thurmer.