Return to the Planet of the Apes (1975)

I recently found a DVD boxset of Return to the Planet of the Apes in a charity shop which I bought for £4, which is a ridiculously cheap price. I considered it an interesting find because it was a Region 1, US copy. However, that is not so unusual these days as most DVD players are now region free and Amazon (UK) sells media from all over the world. As for the show in question, I vaguely remember Return to the Planet of the Apes being shown on UK network TV when I was a child, probably circa 1976. Back then it would usually take a year or so before US shows made it onto UK television. From a commercial perspective, the entire Planet of the Apes franchise was beginning to run out of steam. I was 8 years old at the time so had missed most of the film releases. However, I enjoyed the live action TV show hence an animated follow up had obvious appeal to a child of my age. 

I recently found a DVD boxset of Return to the Planet of the Apes in a charity shop which I bought for £4, which is a ridiculously cheap price. I considered it an interesting find because it was a Region 1, US copy. However, that is not so unusual these days as most DVD players are now region free and Amazon (UK) sells media from all over the world. As for the show in question, I vaguely remember Return to the Planet of the Apes being shown on UK network TV when I was a child, probably circa 1976. Back then it would usually take a year or so before US shows made it onto UK television. From a commercial perspective, the entire Planet of the Apes franchise was beginning to run out of steam. I was 8 years old at the time so had missed most of the film releases. However, I enjoyed the live action TV show hence an animated follow up had obvious appeal to a child of my age. 

50 years on and I could recollect very little of Return to the Planet of the Apes. Usually specific episodes stand out from the various TV shows of my youth. Yesteryear from Star Trek: The Animated Series being a prime example of this. Yet after wracking my brain I could not recall much from this show beyond superficial details. Upon watching Return to the Planet of the Apes again, the reason for this became immediately clear. Instead of favouring just a story of the week approach, as so many shows did back then, this animated production attempted to sustain a wider continuous story arc spread across all 13 episodes as well. Something that makes the show quite unusual. After watching all episodes, it became quite clear that Return to the Planet of the Apes is quite a different beast from other animated shows from this era. I suspect that is why it may have struggled to find an audience with its target demographic.

Produced by DePatie–Freleng Enterprises, Return to the Planet of the Apes was creatively overseen by Doug Wildey. Wildey was a comic artist and had been involved in the creation  of numerous popular animated TV shows. With regard to the plot, Return to the Planet of the Apes draws heavily from themes from the original Planet of the Apes feature film and its sequel Beneath the Planet of the Apes. Being an animated production, the scope of the ape dominated world is greatly expanded. The feature films depicted ape society as being predominantly agrarian and their culture having grown in a limited way from a wider world decline. Here, ape society is more advanced and is depicted as being comparable to post WWII America. There are automobiles, radio and television, modern weapons and a broadly democratic society. Ape City is exactly that. All of which is much closer to author Pierre Boulle’s original source text.

The animated style is interesting. Backgrounds are detailed and often depict notable vistas. The camera often pans across these to substantiate plot points. Character animation is minimal, even by TV standards of the time. In many ways watching the show is more akin to reading a graphic novel or watching flash animations from the early days of the internet. However, this works well within the scope of the show. Thematically Return to the Planet of the Apes explores some interesting ideas and although accessible to children, has some quite dark and cerebral ideas contained with the ongoing plot. There are hints of a policy of genocide, driven by the Gorilla Military towards the residual human population. The Underdwellers, the cult of mutants who live in the Forbidden Zone, are depicted as religious zealots and it implied that the US was indeed the belligerent party that started the nuclear war that devastated the world.

The voice acting is adequate as is the musical score. A lot of the criticisms of Return to the Planet of the Apes at the time stemmed from the show’s modest budget, which imposed a great many restrictions upon the production. At first glance many viewers may simply see Return to the Planet of the Apes as being a cheap and cynical animated show, designed to squeeze whatever financial gain was left from a declining franchise. If you look a little harder, there is some creativity and innovation to be found over the 13 episodes. Sadly, the show was cancelled and the planned conclusion to the story arc was never produced. It allegedly explored the idea of rights being extended to humans within ape society which is a bold and somewhat adult concept to have in a children’s TV show. As it stands Return to the Planet of the Apes is an interesting curiosity and as such will appeal to those who find such things appealing.

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