“Dawn of the Planet of the Apes” and “How to Train Your Dragon 2” are 
sequels to two films that made it to my five best list in years past. 
Two nights ago I attended a press screening for the first film that 
opens everywhere on Friday, while the second I saw in a neighborhood 
theater as probably the only person eligible for senior discount to have 
done so. The films deal with a question that is at the heart of the 
human condition under late capitalism, namely how to relate to 
animals—the quintessential Other. Of course, dragons never really 
existed but in the animated feature they have much more in common with 
horses and dogs. Even though they breathe fire and can fly, they turn 
out to be anxious to be domesticated, the conceit that makes the 
animated feature so endearing—even to an old crab like me. Unfortunately 
the Dragon sequel is not nearly so good as the first in the series, a 
victim of Hollywood’s lust for profits. But the Apes movie fares much 
better, to the point of topping the original. Of course, leaving James 
Franco out of the sequel would guarantee that.

For those who did not see the first film, “The Rise of the Planet of the 
Apes” is a canny fictionalization of the questions posed in the 
documentary “Project Nim”. Franco plays a scientist attempting to teach 
the chimpanzee Caesar how to communicate after the fashion of the 
experiments conducted by Columbia University professor Herb Terrace on 
Nim Chimpsky from an early age. The animal was named after the MIT 
linguist who was firm in the belief that only human beings can use 
language, either spoken or signed.

full: 
http://www.counterpunch.org/2014/07/11/a-survival-guide-to-summer-blockbusters/
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