General Thade in the remake whereas in the original it was General Ursus .
is name is Caesar
Helena Bonham Carter played Dr Zira in the 2001 remake
In "Rise of the Planet of the Apes," Will Rodman, played by James Franco, does not die; instead, he is a key character who helps lead Caesar, the intelligent ape, to freedom. However, the film's climax shows the consequences of the ape uprising and the effects of the ALZ-112 drug Will developed. Will's father, Charles, succumbs to Alzheimer's disease, highlighting the tragic impact of the experiments, but Will himself survives throughout the film.
Jane Porter is not a character from George of the Jungle. She appears in the Tarzan of the Apes eventually becoming Lady Greystoke. The female lead from George of the Jungle is Leslie Mann who plays Ursula Stanhope.
Leslie Nielsen was the male lead (along with Walter Pidgeon) in "Forbidden Planet."
The theme of Beneath the Planet of the Apes is that the worship of technology can ultimately lead to destruction of the planet.
is name is Caesar
Helena Bonham Carter played Dr Zira in the 2001 remake
Cliffhangers are great ways to finish a film! They often lead to better re-watchability or a nice setup for sequels.In Planet of the Apes in particular, the cliffhanger allows the viewer to realize how backward the world is that Taylor had visited, while at the same time how familiar...
Technology can lead to unintended consequencesCultural arrogance/superiority is badThe future can be very different based on what we doYou might not like what you find in the future
Option b is not an idea put forth by evolutionary biologists. Rather, the correct statement would be: Humans and apes share a common ancestor.
No. Human evolution is a cladogenic process as far as we can tell. That is to say that we share common ancestry with monkeys who split into species which lead to modern apes of which we are one of the great apes of Africa. About 6-7 million tears ago the last common ancestor of both chimpanzees and humans gave rise to the two different species that you see today.
Jane Porter is not a character from George of the Jungle. She appears in the Tarzan of the Apes eventually becoming Lady Greystoke. The female lead from George of the Jungle is Leslie Mann who plays Ursula Stanhope.
It is inaccurate to say that humans were once other similar apes such as gorillas or chimpanzees. Instead, evolutions states that our species and other species of great apes share a common ancestor. That means at some point a long time ago, our three species were one species and over time, we diverged into what we are today. It is exceedingly unlikely for any of the current species of great apes to retrace millions of years of evolution back to that common ancestor and begin to evolve on the exact same path as humans. Instead, they will continue on their own evolutionary path that is parallel to others and will not converge.
Apes do not turn into a men. Both the great apes and humans have a common ancestor who lived around 7 million years ago. One group of this ancestor population stayed in the trees and became modern apes, while another ventured further and further afield of the forest to become humans. The need to walk over savannah while our arms were full of various food stuffs or weapons lead to our current foot structure and bipedal locomotion. We lost our hair as a way to cool our bodies, and we gained darker skin to keep it from getting burnt by the sun. Our brains grew so we could better adapt to the ever changing environment of ancient Africa. Eating more cooked meat contributed to this growth. Our once ape-like flat nose grew to its current proportions to deal with colder temperatures. Before the Dawn (2006) by Nicholas Wade.
executives do not lead the military... civilians do. and civilians lead the military to prevent military coups. currently POTUS is Barrack Obama and SECDEF is Leon Panetta
Answer 1No true Muslim calls Jews the descendents of apes and pigs. The Qur'an mentions three groups of Jews.One group broke the rule of Sabath. (Saturday)The second group didn't defy the command of Almighty God itself, but didn't warn group One to refrain from that bad activity.The third group warned the first group to refrain from defying the Command.First two groups pushed the third group to the other side of the wall. Almighty God turned the first two groups in the form of Apes and pigs. But these apes and pigs died within a few days of their punishment. So there are no descendents of those Jews who were turned into apes. No civilized person should call others the descendents of apes and pigs. All humans are the off-spring of Hazrat Adam (AS) and Hazrat Eve (AS).Answer 2Yes, some do.The question is "Do Muslims say..." not "Do allMuslims say..." because there are certainly Muslims (persons who identify themselves as and are typically idenftified as Muslims) who do say that Jews are apes and swine and they claim that their view is Qur'anic. There have also been numerous Islamic leaders, Muslims with political and religious clout, who make this assertion. Some of these leaders include: PA Mufti Muhammad Hussein, Sheikh Muhammad Al-Tawil - a teacher in Al-Aqsa Mosque school, Saudi school textbooks, Mohammed Morsi, Hassan Nasrallah, Sheikh Eid Abdel Hamid Youssef - Egyptian lead sheikh in 2009, Al-Azhar Sheikh Muhammad Sayyid Tantawi, and Saudi sheikh Abd Al-Rahman Al-Sudayyis.The leaders who make these assertions, base their views on interpretations of the Qur'anic verses Q: 2:63-65, 5:59-60, and 7:166, all of which refer to God turning the Jews who violated their commandments into apes and pigs. Unfortunately, many Muslims (especially more zealous Anti-Semities and Anti-Zionists among them) do not use the term "apes and pigs" to refer to this specific set of Jews, but use it to tar Jews in general.It is worth noting that there are three interpretations of what happened to the Jews discussed in Q: 2:63-65 because the Qur'an itself does not provide an outcome. There is the view, as mentioned in Answer 1, which is the dominant view, holding that the Jews who were turned into animals died within three days without having any offspring. There is the view that the Jews who were turned into animals remained animals and reproduced as animals, contributing to the animal population, such as brought up by Al-Jahiz in "The Book of Animals" who notes that the reason why lizard hands may look like human hands is because lizards might be descended from the oath-breaking Jews. Finally, there is the view that the oath-breakers were changed back from being animals to being humans again and that the Jews of today are their descendants. This view is becoming increasingly popular as it provides a perfect corollary to Anti-Zionist sentiment in the Islamic World. (The argument works that the State of Israel is inherently immoral as a country since Jews are inherently immoral as a people.)Other sheikhs have noticed the failure by Islamic Leaders to contextualize the Qur'anic verses and reprimand by holding to third approach.Sheikh Qaradawi in Egypt has said: "I denounced some contemporary religious preachers, who curse the Jews and the Christians, saying: "Allah, annihilate the Jews and the Christians." Where did this come from? There are Jews and Christians in our Muslim countries. There are Copts in Egypt, and Christians in Syria. So how can you curse them? Not only that, but they curse: "Allah, turn their children in orphans," "Allah, destroy their homes." Who sanctioned such prayers?...I denounced some people who said that the Jews are the offspring of apes and pigs. That's not true. When God transformed some people into apes and pigs, they did not have any offspring, as is written in the Al-Muslim compilation."Tawfik Hamid has also noted this issue, making it his "letter C" on his "ABCs Test of Radical Islam" - "Calling Jews Apes and Pigs".As to the position raised in Answer 1 that "true Muslims believe x", that is a "No True Scotsman fallacy". Typically, a Muslim is any person who says شهادتين (Shahadatayn) - the two testimonies (that there is only one God and that Mohammed is His Messenger) - with conviction. All of the people cited above do exactly that. Additionally, there is a scholarly position which holds what they believe. Admittedly, it is a controversial doctrine, but it is not as if those Muslims who say that Jews are the descendants of apes and pigs do not have ground to stand on; they do.Below in the Related Links are several instances of Islamic leaders calling the Jews "descendants of apes and pigs".