In a futuristic world that has embraced ape slavery, a chimpanzee named Caesar resurfaces after almost twenty years of hiding from the authorities, and prepares for a revolt against humanity.
In a futuristic world that has embraced ape slavery, a chimpanzee named Caesar resurfaces after almost twenty years of hiding from the authorities, and prepares for a revolt against humanity.
The film's central thesis explicitly promotes progressive ideology by depicting the systemic oppression and brutalization of apes by humans, culminating in a violent, successful revolution for liberation, directly critiquing authoritarianism and exploitation.
The movie features traditional human casting for its time, without explicit modern DEI-driven race or gender swaps. However, its central narrative strongly critiques the dominant human power structure, portraying the human oppressors negatively through themes of exploitation and rebellion.
Conquest of the Planet of the Apes does not feature any identifiable LGBTQ+ characters or themes. Its narrative centers on the rebellion of apes against human oppressors, exploring social commentary through the lens of species conflict rather than queer identity.
The film primarily focuses on the male ape character Caesar leading an uprising against human oppressors. While female apes are present in the ape community and participate in the rebellion, there are no specific scenes depicting a female character individually defeating one or more male opponents in direct physical combat.
This film is a direct sequel in the original Planet of the Apes series. All returning or referenced characters maintain their established genders from previous installments, and new characters introduced do not contradict any prior canonical gender.
The film features ape characters portrayed by human actors, which is consistent with the franchise's established premise. No human character was canonically established as one race and then portrayed as a different race in this installment.
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