In
“The Deception,” Galen (Roddy McDowall), Alan Virdon (Ron Harper) and Peter Burke (James
Naughton) unexpectedly become enmeshed in a local racial dispute when the death
of an ape at human hands results in vigilante acts by angry apes.
These
vigilante apes ride on horses, wear hoods, and torch farms belonging to humans.
They are also willing to commit murder to assert their supremacy (and their hatred for humans). These are the monsters known as the
Dragoons.
The
fugitives meet with the daughter, Fauna (Jane Acton), of the slain ape, Lucian,
and learn that she is blind. She
mistakes Burke for an ape and falls in love with him, an act which precipitates
an unfortunate deception on the part of the heroic trio.
Meanwhile,
Galen pretends to be a human-hating ape so as to infiltrate “the dragoons,” the
ape vigilante cult. His mission fails, which means that Alan and Pete have no
choice but to seek the help of local ape authorities.
Although,
again, there is no real mythology presented in this episode of Planet
of the Apes (1974), “The Deception” is nonetheless one of the strongest
episodes of the short-lived series. There are two reasons why this is the case.
First,
the episode focuses on an unfortunate mistake or accident. Fauna, an ape, falls
in love with Burke, a human, and he can’t correct the situation without putting
himself and his friends in danger. In other words, Burke must go on, with Galen’s
help, pretending to be an ape, so as not to be discovered. Burke is acutely
aware that this deception is hurtful to Fauna. Galen actually gets angry with
Burke about the situation, though there is nothing else to be done.
I
could write that this is a very “human” predicament, but that may not be an appropriate
description given the circumstances. The bottom line is that this episode
allows Galen to show anger and irritation when he perceives that a gentle, kind
ape is mistreated. And it also permits Burke to express regret over his own actions. Too often, the main characters on this series
seem infallible or are grappling only with simple-minded action
plot-lines. Here, the cost of the fugitives’
deception is very personal.
Secondly,
“The Deception” works beautifully on an allegorical or metaphorical level.
Here,
apes who boast monstrous race-hatred towards humans don hoods, burn down human
farms, and threaten humans with terror so as to achieve their agenda of
dominance. “The Deception” calls these
monsters “The Dragoons.”
We recognize them, in our world, as the Ku Klux Klan.
The
Klan (and the Dragoons) believe first and foremost in their own superiority,
and secondly, that their superiority gives them the right to circumvent the law
to achieve their ends. The Dragoons, and their real life model, are but cowards who
hide in hoods so they can commit their crimes without reprisals from law
enforcement, and society at large.
It is
rewarding that Planet of the Apes would tackle the problem of race-based hate
groups in America, in 1974, and the comparison to our world is powerful, and
impossible to miss. The presentation of the “Dragoons” is similarly a reminder
that not everybody accepts diversity, or people of different beliefs.
Some people respond to evolving social order with terrible violence. Some people seek to destroy that which is different, or which they don't understand.
Notably, the gorilla sheriff, Perdix (Baynes Barron) in this episode is treated in an even-handed manner, which
is quite a surprise given the franchise. He may be a gorilla, but nonetheless he sees the value in
the rule of law, and does not succumb to the hatred that other apes --
including a chimpanzee -- do, in this situation.
Gorillas are almost universally treated as
one-note, or two-dimensional characters in this series; they are dumb,
militaristic brutes. This episode stands out as a notable and remarkable
exception.
Fauna is also a terrific character, and the fact that she is blind is not a gimmick. Instead, it is a significant reminder that we can't always "see" the truth, even when it is right in front of us. Fauna hates humans because she believed they killed her father. She is unaware that her own kind -- apes -- are responsible for this crime.
She falls in love with Burke, as well, because of the kindness she senses him. She has closed herself off the possibility that the quality of kindness could exist in a human being. Without her eyes to confirm her hatred, she is a different person
“The
Deception” is a powerful, well-constructed episode because it isn’t just a series of captures and
rescues, but a story about people who make mistakes, and about dark tendencies that we recognize from our own world, even today.
Next
week, a journey back to the mundane: “The Horse Race.”
Spectacular review! Your POTA reviews inspired me to watch the premiere episode of the PLANET OF THE APES animated series and I was shocked to see that it involved characters from the movies, including Nova and Brent!
ReplyDeleteI am so grateful for your overview of this series -- both from a deep sense of nostalgia for my 70s obsessed boyhood, and for insight into how television science fiction once was. (I think I liked it better, then.)
ReplyDelete