1. - Red Baron Control. Red Baron Five.
- Go ahead, Red Baron Five.
Copy !req
2. Roger. Orbiting southeast corner
of sector Alpha Charlie.
Copy !req
3. We've spotted what appears to be
a spacecraft just outside the surf line.
Copy !req
4. Alert rescue. Advise we can
remain on station for 45 minutes.
Copy !req
5. - Will squawk 7700 for a radar fix.
- Roger.
Copy !req
6. Rescue, I have Red Baron Five report
of possible spacecraft offshore,
Copy !req
7. southeast sector Alpha Charlie.
Copy !req
8. Launch chopper. Effect pickup
and recovery. Base radar will vector.
Copy !req
9. Everybody out! Let's move.
Come on, let's go.
Copy !req
10. Sergeant, get that half-track here
and get a cable to those frogmen.
Copy !req
11. Yes, sir!
Copy !req
12. The general, sir.
Copy !req
13. - Anybody in that thing?
- I don't know, sir. We just beached it.
Copy !req
14. - All right, open her up.
- Open it up!
Copy !req
15. Welcome, gentlemen, to the United St...
Copy !req
16. - Did you call the zoo?
- Yes, sir. We're in luck.
Copy !req
17. The sick bay's almost empty except for
a mauled fox cub and a depressed gorilla.
Copy !req
18. The apes'll be hidden from the public
and quarantined.
Copy !req
19. If they need medical attention,
it's available.
Copy !req
20. The experts can give them
the once-over tomorrow.
Copy !req
21. - General Brody's very pleased.
- Oh, me too.
Copy !req
22. We can't let a lot of monkeys
leave their messes on the floor.
Copy !req
23. Have they been fed? Raw steak?
Copy !req
24. The zoo tells me that chimpanzees,
like all apes, are vegetarian, sir.
Copy !req
25. - They suggested oranges.
- Good God!
Copy !req
26. What's the matter, Corporal?
Copy !req
27. Oh, excuse me. I didn't mean
to disturb you while you're dressing.
Copy !req
28. - What the hell am I saying?
- They're pretending to dress, sir.
Copy !req
29. What do you mean? They are dressing!
Copy !req
30. - Where are the clothes from?
- They brought them.
Copy !req
31. - What?
- In that suitcase.
Copy !req
32. Greg, maybe you should
give "em their oranges.
Copy !req
33. Well, they're...
Copy !req
34. They're going to the zoo infirmary.
Arrange for a police escort at 1630 hours.
Copy !req
35. They'll have company there.
Copy !req
36. There's a gorilla in the next cage.
Copy !req
37. Why did it do that?
Copy !req
38. Here you are, little fella.
Copy !req
39. Boy, you really are sick.
Copy !req
40. Hello, missy. Have a banana.
Copy !req
41. Have it your own way, mate.
Copy !req
42. - Zira!
- I'm not his mate, I'm yours.
Copy !req
43. Control yourself.
I think they're trying to be kind.
Copy !req
44. This cage stinks of gorilla.
Copy !req
45. Cornelius, where are we?
What's happened?
Copy !req
46. I know where we are.
Copy !req
47. I know what has happened.
Copy !req
48. In some fashion,
Copy !req
49. and I lack the intellect
to know precisely how,
Copy !req
50. we have traveled from
Earth's future to Earth's past.
Copy !req
51. But we saw the Earth destroyed.
Copy !req
52. And Earth will be destroyed,
just as we saw it.
Copy !req
53. Only, since seeing it, we have passed
through a backward disturbance in time.
Copy !req
54. Did you notice the date meter clicking
down after the shock wave hit our ship?
Copy !req
55. Yes.
Copy !req
56. We returned to Earth nearly
2,000 years before its destruction.
Copy !req
57. That is another reason for us
to keep silent.
Copy !req
58. Our human captors
will not be edified to learn
Copy !req
59. that their world will crack like an egg
Copy !req
60. and burn to a cinder
because of an ape war of aggression.
Copy !req
61. Apes, at this instant in time,
Copy !req
62. cannot yet talk.
Copy !req
63. For the moment,
we should follow their example.
Copy !req
64. The driver gave me this report
from the air base.
Copy !req
65. Better read it before we start the test.
Copy !req
66. Yeah, it's the usual imitated behavior.
Mimicking salutes, handshaking,
Copy !req
67. eating off plates with knives.
Copy !req
68. What is it?
Copy !req
69. - There was a carpetbag in the ship.
- Full of food?
Copy !req
70. No, clothes. And it seems
they changed into them.
Copy !req
71. I don't believe it!
Copy !req
72. Hi, Dr Dixon. Dr Branton.
Copy !req
73. - Morning, Arthur.
- Morning.
Copy !req
74. - The female's a bit uppity, sir.
- OK, I'll be careful.
Copy !req
75. I see you've prepared the Wisconsin
Multiphasic. We'll begin with that.
Copy !req
76. Go easy now, Stevie.
Copy !req
77. Oh, they look pretty docile to me.
Copy !req
78. Yes, but don't take any chances.
Copy !req
79. Unless the craft was remotely controlled,
Copy !req
80. they must have been conditioned to push
the right buttons. They can't be morons.
Copy !req
81. All right, we'll take the female first.
Copy !req
82. Arthur, would you set up a...
Copy !req
83. Well, she seems to be pretty smart.
Copy !req
84. All right, let's make it more difficult.
Copy !req
85. - They... haven't had their breakfast yet?
- Not a bite, just as you ordered.
Copy !req
86. Good. We'll go for the banana.
Copy !req
87. Well, why doesn't she take it?
Copy !req
88. Because I loathe bananas!
Copy !req
89. Zira!
Copy !req
90. - I don't believe it.
- Yes.
Copy !req
91. Arthur, I think Dr Branton needs some air.
Copy !req
92. - Zira, are you mad?
- Dr Milo, please do not call my wife mad!
Copy !req
93. I did not call her mad, I merely asked her
if she was. And I repeat: are you mad?
Copy !req
94. I hate deceit!
Copy !req
95. Well, there is a time for truth
and a time, not for lies, but for silence.
Copy !req
96. Until we know who our friends are...
Copy !req
97. How in the name of God are we
to know that unless we communicate?
Copy !req
98. - We can speak, so I spoke.
- And we can listen.
Copy !req
99. - To a lot of psychiatric small talk.
- And we can watch!
Copy !req
100. - A display of primitive apparatus.
- It couldn't test the intelligence of a newt!
Copy !req
101. - Calm yourself.
- I am calm!
Copy !req
102. - Zira!
- Stop arguing!
Copy !req
103. It's too late for that.
Use your heads and start thinking.
Copy !req
104. Now that they know we can speak,
how much will we tell them?
Copy !req
105. Milo!
Copy !req
106. We'll need a full autopsy.
Copy !req
107. With emphasis on the cranial
and oral areas.
Copy !req
108. Let us know when the report
comes in, will you, please?
Copy !req
109. I'd better do this alone.
Copy !req
110. We mean you no harm.
Copy !req
111. Do you understand? We will not hurt you.
Copy !req
112. Poor Doctor Milo.
Copy !req
113. - Doctor?
- Yes, "Doctor." And you killed him.
Copy !req
114. No, I didn't. He did.
Copy !req
115. - One of your own kind.
- He's a gorilla.
Copy !req
116. Well, look, there's nothing to be afraid of.
Copy !req
117. He's in chains. He's under sedation.
Copy !req
118. Do you understand that?
Copy !req
119. I should. I've been doing it
half my life to humans.
Copy !req
120. - Humans?
- I'm a psychiatrist.
Copy !req
121. Oh, I'm a psychiatrist, too.
Copy !req
122. Do you... have a name?
Copy !req
123. My name is Cornelius.
This is my wife, Zira.
Copy !req
124. And I'm Lewis. Lewis Dixon.
Copy !req
125. Nobody's gonna believe this.
Copy !req
126. - Believe what?
- That primitive apes can talk.
Copy !req
127. - Primitive?
- Well, I mean that in our...
Copy !req
128. primitive civilization, apes just don't talk.
Copy !req
129. I mean, I think it's important
Copy !req
130. that when our primitive
security precautions are lifted,
Copy !req
131. that the first time
you say anything in public,
Copy !req
132. you should talk to
what we primitively call the right people.
Copy !req
133. May I say something... personal?
Copy !req
134. Please.
Copy !req
135. I like you.
Copy !req
136. I have from the beginning.
Copy !req
137. - Good afternoon, gentlemen.
- Mr President.
Copy !req
138. I'm aware that what I have to say may
Copy !req
139. create a credibility gap
wider than the Grand Canyon.
Copy !req
140. Nonetheless, it is true.
Copy !req
141. Yesterday, a US spacecraft splashed
down off the southern California coast.
Copy !req
142. It was one of two that have been
missing in space for over two years.
Copy !req
143. To be exact, the one
commanded by Colonel Taylor.
Copy !req
144. - Have they identified the bodies?
- They have identified three bodies, yes.
Copy !req
145. All living...
Copy !req
146. - Taylor's alive?
- ..at the time of their rescue.
Copy !req
147. Through an unfortunate accident, one was
killed this morning in the Los Angeles Zoo.
Copy !req
148. Zoo?
Copy !req
149. What would astronauts
be doing in a zoo, Mr President?
Copy !req
150. They are not astronauts, General Faulkner.
Copy !req
151. They are apes.
Chimpanzees, to be more precise.
Copy !req
152. They're harmless, friendly,
and, by all reports,
Copy !req
153. extremely intelligent and sophisticated.
Copy !req
154. But, naturally, being animals,
they cannot tell us
Copy !req
155. where the ship came from
or how they came to be in it.
Copy !req
156. I have therefore decided to convene
Copy !req
157. a Presidential Commission of Inquiry
in Los Angeles tomorrow.
Copy !req
158. The two surviving apes will be presented
to the commission for their inspection.
Copy !req
159. The press will be invited
to attend, not to participate.
Copy !req
160. I don't believe that we can
Copy !req
161. withhold this extraordinary discovery
from the world any longer.
Copy !req
162. One of the two American spaceships
believed to have disintegrated in orbit
Copy !req
163. splashed down yesterday in the Pacific
Ocean, off the coast of southern California,
Copy !req
164. and is stated to have been manned,
Copy !req
165. if you can call it "manned," by monkeys.
Copy !req
166. I have nothing to say, gentlemen.
Copy !req
167. I haven't got time now. A little later.
Copy !req
168. Here comes the chairman.
Copy !req
169. As the president's science advisor,
Copy !req
170. what do you expect to experience
from this historic meeting?
Copy !req
171. Fear.
Copy !req
172. All right now. After I break the news,
Copy !req
173. I want you to start slowly with simple
answers to what will be simple questions.
Copy !req
174. And if the questions become less simple?
Copy !req
175. - Be yourself.
- Your better self, Zira. Please?
Copy !req
176. - They're ready, sir.
- All right, it's time.
Copy !req
177. What do they think we are? Gorillas?
Copy !req
178. I'm sorry.
Copy !req
179. That's it. Just be seated.
Copy !req
180. Mr Chairman,
members of the commission,
Copy !req
181. ladies and gentlemen,
my name is Lewis Dixon.
Copy !req
182. I am the animal psychiatrist
Copy !req
183. who has been in charge of these two apes
since they came to the Los Angeles Zoo.
Copy !req
184. My associate, Dr Stephanie Branton,
and I are ready to answer your questions.
Copy !req
185. What may astonish you is that
Copy !req
186. our chimpanzee friends are ready
to answer your questions, too.
Copy !req
187. Not by signs, not by looks or movements,
Copy !req
188. but by words.
Copy !req
189. Dr Dixon. As a zoologist,
I know and respect your work,
Copy !req
190. but if you want to turn
a Presidential Inquiry
Copy !req
191. into a ventriloquist's act,
I have to inform you...
Copy !req
192. And I have to inform you that
these apes have the power of speech.
Copy !req
193. Come, now. You know as well as I do
Copy !req
194. their brain system is not developed in
either the vocal or abstract-thinking area.
Copy !req
195. Yes, sir, but they do have
the power of speech,
Copy !req
196. and it is for you gentlemen to assess
Copy !req
197. how far that power
can be exercised intelligently.
Copy !req
198. May we be told which
is the female of the species?
Copy !req
199. Did she rise as a reflex to you
having indicated her,
Copy !req
200. or in answer to my question?
Copy !req
201. That's for you to decide.
Copy !req
202. - Have you a name?
- Zira.
Copy !req
203. Certainly she can articulate,
which in itself is extraordinary.
Copy !req
204. But, Dr Dixon,
are we to infer that Zira is her name,
Copy !req
205. or some phrase in her own language?
Copy !req
206. Infer what you will, Mr Chairman.
I suggest you rephrase the question.
Copy !req
207. What is your name?
Copy !req
208. - One might as well be talking to a parrot.
- A parrot?
Copy !req
209. Mechanical mimicry.
Unique in an ape vocally, without a doubt.
Copy !req
210. But... does the other one talk?
Copy !req
211. Only when she lets me.
Copy !req
212. - Dr Hasslein.
- No. Nothing.
Copy !req
213. - Mr Chairman.
- Yes.
Copy !req
214. What is the male's name, please?
Copy !req
215. - Cornelius.
- My lawfully wedded spouse.
Copy !req
216. - Wedded?
- We'll take that up later, Your Eminence.
Copy !req
217. Cornelius, do you and
your lawfully wedded spouse
Copy !req
218. speak any language other than English?
Copy !req
219. What is English?
Copy !req
220. I speak the language taught to me by my
parents, who were taught by their parents.
Copy !req
221. It has been the language
of our ancestors for nearly 2,000 years.
Copy !req
222. As to its origins, who can be sure?
Copy !req
223. The gorillas and orangutans
of our community
Copy !req
224. believe that God created the ape
in His own image, and that our language...
Copy !req
225. Nonsense!
Copy !req
226. Cornelius, as an intellectual, you know
the gorillas are militaristic nincompoops
Copy !req
227. and the orangutans, a bunch
of blinkered, pseudoscientific geese!
Copy !req
228. As to humans, I've dissect...
Copy !req
229. I've examined thousands of them,
Copy !req
230. and, until now, I've only
discovered two who could talk in my life.
Copy !req
231. God knows who taught them.
Copy !req
232. Where we come from, apes talk.
Copy !req
233. Humans are dumb.
Copy !req
234. - Where do you come from, Cornelius?
- I'm not sure.
Copy !req
235. Dr Milo was sure.
Copy !req
236. Dr Milo was a genius
well in advance of his time.
Copy !req
237. When the spacecraft first landed on our
seaboard, it was Dr Milo who salvaged it.
Copy !req
238. He studied it and half understood it.
Copy !req
239. Half? Was half enough?
Copy !req
240. It was enough for us to escape
when war became inevitable.
Copy !req
241. Enough for Dr Milo
to be murdered in your zoo.
Copy !req
242. Enough for my wife and I to be here now.
Copy !req
243. - From where, Cornelius?
- I told you. I'm not sure.
Copy !req
244. Maybe the female knows.
Copy !req
245. Of course "the female" knows.
Copy !req
246. We came from your future.
Copy !req
247. That doesn't make any sense.
Copy !req
248. It's the only thing that does.
Copy !req
249. - Mr Chairman.
- Yes.
Copy !req
250. Cornelius. You spoke of war.
Copy !req
251. - War between whom?
- The gorillas and whoever lives...
Copy !req
252. Lived. Will live.
Copy !req
253. - Who won the war?
- I don't know.
Copy !req
254. The chimpanzees are pacifists.
We stayed at home.
Copy !req
255. - But you left before the war had ended.
- In a spaceship.
Copy !req
256. - Which Dr Milo learned to navigate.
- Correct.
Copy !req
257. Cornelius, did you know a Colonel Taylor?
Copy !req
258. No. Is he a soldier?
Copy !req
259. We are peaceful creatures.
Copy !req
260. We are happy to be here.
May we be unchained?
Copy !req
261. - Gentlemen, do you have anything to say?
- No comment.
Copy !req
262. No comment.
Copy !req
263. - Mr Chairman, a word.
- Here's one: preposterous.
Copy !req
264. - Can you define that?
- No, just let me say this
Copy !req
265. as head of this commission. We will
examine the facts of this bizarre affair
Copy !req
266. and pass our conclusions on to
the president for implementation.
Copy !req
267. What a load of huggermugger.
Copy !req
268. No comment.
Copy !req
269. - How will you advise the president?
- No comment.
Copy !req
270. Could you tell us how you
personally would handle it?
Copy !req
271. No, gentlemen. No comment.
Copy !req
272. Yet.
Copy !req
273. - You were fabulous!
- Marvelous. All that applause, but...
Copy !req
274. But... there was a moment...
Copy !req
275. - There was. When he started to ask...
- Zira.
Copy !req
276. - Cornelius, I think we should tell them.
- No.
Copy !req
277. - But only to Lewis and Stevie.
- Oh, Zira.
Copy !req
278. I have to be honest with someone.
Copy !req
279. Cornelius, please.
Copy !req
280. You tell them.
Copy !req
281. Well, you see...
Copy !req
282. We did know Colonel Taylor.
We came to love him.
Copy !req
283. What harm could there be
in telling that to the commission?
Copy !req
284. Where we come from,
Copy !req
285. apes did not love humans.
Copy !req
286. They... hunted them for sport,
much as you would animals.
Copy !req
287. Yes, we used their bodies,
alive and dead, experimentally.
Copy !req
288. For anatomical dissection
and scientific research.
Copy !req
289. Well...
Copy !req
290. We do the same thing to animals.
Copy !req
291. I mean, as a scientist I sympathize, but
Copy !req
292. I agree that's a revelation
the masses would not take kindly to.
Copy !req
293. I think you did the right thing
in denying knowledge of Colonel Taylor.
Copy !req
294. There was another reason.
Copy !req
295. What?
Copy !req
296. They would have asked
if he was still alive.
Copy !req
297. - And is he?
- Oh, no. He can't be.
Copy !req
298. - How do you know?
- Cos...
Copy !req
299. From the windows of the spaceship...
Copy !req
300. We saw the Earth...
Copy !req
301. destroyed.
Copy !req
302. Stand by.
Copy !req
303. Good evening.
This is Bill Bonds in Los Angeles.
Copy !req
304. The biggest story since the moon landing
broke when two apes talked,
Copy !req
305. I repeat, talked to
the Presidential Commission of Inquiry.
Copy !req
306. With me this evening is Dr Otto Hasslein.
Copy !req
307. He is a senior scientific advisor
at the White House.
Copy !req
308. He'll give his views on the crucial
statement made at today's session.
Copy !req
309. Dr Hasslein, as I recall, when you
asked the male ape where he was from,
Copy !req
310. - the female replied "From your future."
- Yes.
Copy !req
311. Do you believe that?
Copy !req
312. Absolutely.
I think it is the only explanation.
Copy !req
313. Maybe the explanation
needs some explaining.
Copy !req
314. You've written several learned
dissertations on the nature of time.
Copy !req
315. Could you explain,
in terms we can understand,
Copy !req
316. how, for instance, a person, or persons,
could travel from time past to time future,
Copy !req
317. or, indeed, vice versa?
Copy !req
318. Mr Bonds, I think time
can only be fully understood
Copy !req
319. by an observer with a godlike
gift of infinite regression.
Copy !req
320. Could you explain
"infinite regression" for us?
Copy !req
321. - Roll the film.
- I came prepared to do just that.
Copy !req
322. Now, here's a painting of a landscape.
Copy !req
323. Now, the artist who painted that picture
says "Something is missing. What is it?"
Copy !req
324. "It is I myself who was
part of the landscape I painted."
Copy !req
325. So he mentally takes a step backward,
Copy !req
326. or regresses, and paints a picture of the
artist painting a picture of the landscape.
Copy !req
327. But still something is missing.
Copy !req
328. That is still his real self
painting the second picture.
Copy !req
329. So he regresses further, and paints a third.
Copy !req
330. A picture of the artist painting a picture
Copy !req
331. of the artist painting a picture
of the landscape.
Copy !req
332. And because something is still missing,
he paints a fourth and a fifth
Copy !req
333. until he paints a picture
of the artist painting a picture
Copy !req
334. of the artist painting a picture
Copy !req
335. of the artist painting a picture
of the artist painting a landscape.
Copy !req
336. So infinite regression, then, is...
Copy !req
337. The moment when our artist has
regressed to the point of infinity
Copy !req
338. and is part of the landscape he painted,
and is both the observer and the observed.
Copy !req
339. In that peculiar condition,
what would he be observing
Copy !req
340. if he were observing, let's say, time?
Copy !req
341. He would perceive
that time is like a freeway
Copy !req
342. with an infinite number of lanes,
Copy !req
343. all leading from the past into the future,
however, not into the same future.
Copy !req
344. A driver in lane A may crash,
while a driver in lane B survives.
Copy !req
345. It follows that a driver,
by changing lanes, can change his future.
Copy !req
346. It is not difficult to believe that in the dark
and turbulent corridors of outer space,
Copy !req
347. the impact of some distant planetary,
even galactic, disaster
Copy !req
348. jumped the apes
from their present into ours.
Copy !req
349. Indeed, the proof lies
in their arrival among us
Copy !req
350. and in their spoken testimony.
Copy !req
351. Thank you very much, Dr Hasslein.
Copy !req
352. It's the most incredible story
this reporter has ever covered.
Copy !req
353. By their intelligence and good humor,
Copy !req
354. the so-called "ape-onauts"
Copy !req
355. have already captured the hearts
of the American nation.
Copy !req
356. They will not be required to appear
before the commission tomorrow.
Copy !req
357. That hearing is going to be held in private.
Copy !req
358. They will, however, be taken
from the zoo infirmary to a hotel
Copy !req
359. and given an extended tour of the city.
Copy !req
360. This is Bill Bonds, reporting
for Eyewitness News. Good night.
Copy !req
361. Good night.
Copy !req
362. - Your luggage, ma'am?
- Of course it's mine!
Copy !req
363. Address, please?
Copy !req
364. The zoo.
Copy !req
365. 40.
Copy !req
366. May I measure your inside leg, sir?
Copy !req
367. - No!
- Oh.
Copy !req
368. Dr Cornelius.
Tell me, how do you find our women?
Copy !req
369. Very human.
Copy !req
370. Very good!
Copy !req
371. Excuse me.
Copy !req
372. Madam Zira, I represent
Fur and Feather, a pet magazine...
Copy !req
373. Do you think I'm a pet?
Copy !req
374. Well, yes, I do rather.
Copy !req
375. Say, why don't you try some?
Copy !req
376. - What is it?
- It's sort of like grape juice plus.
Copy !req
377. Wait, just a sip.
Copy !req
378. Madam Zira, what is your favorite fruit?
Copy !req
379. Grape.
Copy !req
380. And that's the way it was tonight
at the Beverly Wilshire Hotel.
Copy !req
381. Tomorrow, Zira is to speak
at the Bay Area Women's Club.
Copy !req
382. She'll then accompany Dr Hasslein
to the Museum of Natural History.
Copy !req
383. Meanwhile, Cornelius will attend
a prizefight - that's his first one.
Copy !req
384. Later, he'll visit Disneyland to dedicate
a new boat for the Jungle Cruise.
Copy !req
385. Now for a look at the weather. Sunny
California will not be that tomorrow.
Copy !req
386. Clouds will cover the coastal area
with light showers predicted.
Copy !req
387. - Tired?
- A little.
Copy !req
388. How is that?
Copy !req
389. Soothing.
Copy !req
390. But very wet.
Copy !req
391. A marriage bed is made for two,
Copy !req
392. but every damn morning,
it's the woman who has to make it.
Copy !req
393. We have heads as well as hands.
Copy !req
394. I call upon men to let us use them.
Copy !req
395. How do you like it, Cornelius?
Copy !req
396. Beastly.
Copy !req
397. We are now approaching Antrodemus
valens Leidy, a giant flesh-eating dinosaur.
Copy !req
398. Its scientific name is a compound
of the Greek antron, which means hollow,
Copy !req
399. and demus, which means body frame,
referring to the backbone or vertebra.
Copy !req
400. Now, this little fellow
is Camptosaurus Marsh,
Copy !req
401. a primitive duck-billed dinosaur.
Copy !req
402. Its scientific name is a compound of the
Greek campto,
Copy !req
403. which means flexible or bent,
and saurus, which means lizard.
Copy !req
404. Its generic name therefore
is "flexible lizard."
Copy !req
405. In 1879, OC Marsh of Yale University
Copy !req
406. described the first known species
from the Jurassic beds of Wyoming.
Copy !req
407. Other specimens
have been found throughout...
Copy !req
408. - It must have been the shock.
- Shock, my foot!
Copy !req
409. I'm pregnant.
Copy !req
410. I shan't leave you until Cornelius is back.
Copy !req
411. - No, no.
- No, I insist. Please sit down.
Copy !req
412. Now, is there anything I can get you, Zira?
Copy !req
413. Well... I have a strange craving...
Copy !req
414. That is only natural.
Copy !req
415. .. for Grape Juice Plus.
Copy !req
416. - Grape Juice Plus.
- It's in the refrigerator.
Copy !req
417. All right.
Copy !req
418. Is this it?
Copy !req
419. Here we are.
Copy !req
420. Lewis said only a sip.
Copy !req
421. Zira, it is an excellent restorative,
I assure you,
Copy !req
422. especially in cases of pregnancy,
you know?
Copy !req
423. - How long have you known?
- Oh, since well before the war.
Copy !req
424. Do you mind if I smoke?
Copy !req
425. Oh, no. I shouldn't.
Not in view of your condition.
Copy !req
426. Who won your war?
Copy !req
427. It wasn't our war. It was the gorillas" war.
Copy !req
428. Chimpanzees are pashi...
Copy !req
429. Pacifists.
Copy !req
430. We stayed behind.
We never saw the enemy.
Copy !req
431. - But which side won?
- Neither.
Copy !req
432. But how do you know that
if you weren't there?
Copy !req
433. When we were in space,
we saw a bright, white, blinding light.
Copy !req
434. And then we saw
the rim of the Earth melt.
Copy !req
435. And then there was a tornado in the sky.
Copy !req
436. I feel magnificently sleepy.
Copy !req
437. The date meter on the spaceship.
Copy !req
438. What did it read after Earth's destruction?
Copy !req
439. Nineteen...
Copy !req
440. seventy... three.
Copy !req
441. And before?
Before the white light and the tornado?
Copy !req
442. Thirty-nine...
Copy !req
443. fifty... something.
Copy !req
444. - Before the white light and the tornado?
- Thirty-nine...
Copy !req
445. fifty... something.
Copy !req
446. - So?
- You have evidence, Mr President,
Copy !req
447. that one day talking apes
will dominate this Earth
Copy !req
448. and destroy it by 3950-something.
Copy !req
449. I doubt that we shall
still be in office by then.
Copy !req
450. And according to the NASA experts,
Copy !req
451. who are still subjecting
the spaceship to microscopic scrutiny,
Copy !req
452. the precise year of what
you merely infer to be Earth's destruction
Copy !req
453. is recorded on the flight synthesizer
as 3955.
Copy !req
454. AD, presumably.
Copy !req
455. Now, what do you expect me
and the United Nations,
Copy !req
456. though not necessarily
in that order, to do about it?
Copy !req
457. Alter what you believe to be the future
by slaughtering two innocents,
Copy !req
458. or rather three,
now that one of them is pregnant?
Copy !req
459. Herod tried that and Christ survived.
Copy !req
460. - Herod lacked our facilities.
- He also became very unpopular.
Copy !req
461. Historically unpopular.
And we don't want that to happen, do we?
Copy !req
462. - Are you saying...
- I am saying that our two visitors
Copy !req
463. seem to be very charming,
peaceful people,
Copy !req
464. or rather, creatures,
and the voters love them.
Copy !req
465. Do you want their progeny
to dominate the world?
Copy !req
466. Well, not at the next election, no.
Copy !req
467. But, one day, if the progeny turn out
as well as the parents, who knows?
Copy !req
468. They may do a betterjob of it
than we have.
Copy !req
469. - By destroying the world?
Copy !req
470. Are you quite sure that what
they saw destroyed was the world?
Copy !req
471. Well, aren't you?
Copy !req
472. I consider it dispassionately
as a possibility.
Copy !req
473. Not hysterically as a fact.
Copy !req
474. We have their own testimony
that they provoked the war.
Copy !req
475. And they seem to have
provoked you into the bargain.
Copy !req
476. I'm not saying that you're wrong, Hasslein,
but before I have them shot against a wall
Copy !req
477. I want convincing that the handwriting
on the wall is calculably true.
Copy !req
478. Now... convince me.
Copy !req
479. By their own testimony, we know
Copy !req
480. that apes will acquire
the power of intelligent speech.
Copy !req
481. By Zira's testimony,
we know that she's pregnant with child.
Copy !req
482. By my testimony, we know it
is genetically possible for this child,
Copy !req
483. provided that we permit its birth,
Copy !req
484. to bear or beget
a talking ape by a dumb one
Copy !req
485. in a present-day jungle
or a present-day zoo.
Copy !req
486. But do you truly believe
that by deliberate present-day action
Copy !req
487. we can neutralize
that possibility and alter the future?
Copy !req
488. - Yes, Mr President, I do.
- Do you also believe that we should?
Copy !req
489. Given the power to alter the future,
have we the right to use it?
Copy !req
490. I don't know.
Copy !req
491. I've wrestled with this,
Mr President, and I don't know.
Copy !req
492. How many futures are there?
Copy !req
493. Which future has God, if there is a God,
chosen for man's destiny?
Copy !req
494. If I urge the destruction of these two apes,
am I defying God's will or obeying it?
Copy !req
495. - Am I His enemy or His instrument?
- An assassin would say the latter.
Copy !req
496. Do you approve of assassination?
Copy !req
497. We condoned the attempted assassination
Copy !req
498. of Hitler because he was evil.
Copy !req
499. Would we have approved killing him
in babyhood when he was innocent,
Copy !req
500. or killing his mother,
or slaughtering his remote ancestors?
Copy !req
501. We have no proof that these apes are evil.
Copy !req
502. - There are very strong indications.
- Such as?
Copy !req
503. The discrepancies in their answers
to the commission
Copy !req
504. - suggest that, if properly interrogated...
- Are you suggesting that they weren't?
Copy !req
505. - Unprofessionally.
- You want it professional?
Copy !req
506. - The full works.
- Tell that to the commission.
Copy !req
507. I'll abide by their findings.
Copy !req
508. Having convened in secret session
at the request of the president,
Copy !req
509. the commission makes
these interim recommendations.
Copy !req
510. the public should be
informed that the apes,
Copy !req
511. after their arduous space voyage and
the fatigue arising from its publicity,
Copy !req
512. are to be afforded rest in a location whose
identity will not be divulged to the public.
Copy !req
513. since, however, there is
justifiable cause for suspecting
Copy !req
514. that they have withheld
vital information from us,
Copy !req
515. the ape-onauts will in fact
be escorted by Dr Lewis Dixon
Copy !req
516. to the installation known as Camp 11,
Copy !req
517. held there in his care
for interrogation by the ClA
Copy !req
518. under the guidance and supervision
of Dr Otto Hasslein.
Copy !req
519. When we were in space,
we saw a bright, white, blinding light...
Copy !req
520. Brighter than this?
Copy !req
521. Then we saw the rim of the Earth melt.
Copy !req
522. Then there was a tornado in the sky.
Copy !req
523. That's your voice, isn't it?
Copy !req
524. How can I tell? I don't even remember.
Copy !req
525. - Why don't you remember?
- Because Dr Hasslein made me drunk.
Copy !req
526. Why tell him something when drunk
Copy !req
527. that you never told the commission
when sober?
Copy !req
528. Because you were frightened for the safety
of yourselves and your unborn child?
Copy !req
529. - I withheld nothing. Nobody asked me.
- But if somebody had asked?
Copy !req
530. I should have said that chimpanzees
had no part in the destruction of Earth.
Copy !req
531. Only the gorillas and the orangutans.
Copy !req
532. What's the difference? You're all monkeys.
Copy !req
533. Please! Do not say "monkey."
It is offensive.
Copy !req
534. As an archaeologist, I saw history scrolls
which were kept secret from the masses,
Copy !req
535. and I suspect that the weapon which
destroyed Earth was man's own invention.
Copy !req
536. I do know this. One of the reasons
for man's original downfall
Copy !req
537. was your peculiar habit
of murdering one another.
Copy !req
538. Man destroys man.
Apes do not destroy apes.
Copy !req
539. Cornelius.
Copy !req
540. This is not an interracial hassle,
but a search for facts.
Copy !req
541. We do not deny the possibility
of man's decline and fall.
Copy !req
542. All we want to find out is how apes rose.
Copy !req
543. Well...
Copy !req
544. It began in our prehistory
Copy !req
545. - with the plague that fell upon dogs.
- And cats.
Copy !req
546. Hundreds and thousands of them died.
Copy !req
547. Hundreds and thousands
of them had to be destroyed
Copy !req
548. in order to prevent the spread of infection.
Copy !req
549. - There were dog bonfires.
- Yes.
Copy !req
550. And by the time the plague was contained,
Copy !req
551. man was without pets.
Copy !req
552. Of course, for man this was intolerable.
Copy !req
553. I mean, he might kill his brother,
but he could not kill his dog.
Copy !req
554. So humans took primitive apes as pets.
Copy !req
555. Primitive and dumb, but still 20 times
more intelligent than dogs or cats.
Copy !req
556. Correct.
Copy !req
557. They were quartered in cages, but they
lived and moved freely in human homes.
Copy !req
558. They became responsive
to human speech, and,
Copy !req
559. in the course of less than two centuries,
Copy !req
560. they progressed from
performing mere tricks
Copy !req
561. to performing services.
Copy !req
562. Nothing more or less
than a well-trained sheepdog could do.
Copy !req
563. Could a sheepdog cook?
Or clean the house?
Copy !req
564. Or do the marketing for the groceries with
a list from its mistress? Or wait on tables?
Copy !req
565. Or, after three more centuries,
turn the tables on their owners?
Copy !req
566. How?
Copy !req
567. They became alert
to the concept of slavery.
Copy !req
568. And, as their numbers grew, to slavery's
antidote which, of course, is unity.
Copy !req
569. At first, they began
assembling in small groups.
Copy !req
570. They learned the art of
corporate and militant action.
Copy !req
571. They learned to refuse.
Copy !req
572. At first, they just grunted their refusal.
Copy !req
573. But then, on an historic day,
which is commemorated by my species
Copy !req
574. and fully documented in the sacred scrolls,
Copy !req
575. there came Aldo.
Copy !req
576. He did not grunt. He articulated.
Copy !req
577. He spoke a word which had been spoken
to him time without number by humans.
Copy !req
578. He said...
Copy !req
579. "No."
Copy !req
580. So that's how it all started.
Copy !req
581. Clip one, please.
Copy !req
582. Where we come from, apes talk.
Copy !req
583. Humans are dumb.
Copy !req
584. You recognize your husband's
words to the commission?
Copy !req
585. Yes.
Copy !req
586. So humans were dumb. Were they happy?
Copy !req
587. Clip two.
Copy !req
588. As to humans, I've dissec...
Copy !req
589. I've examined thousands of them,
Copy !req
590. and, until now, I've only discovered
two who could talk in my life.
Copy !req
591. Why did you change words
in the middle of the sentence?
Copy !req
592. Repeat first three seconds of clip two.
Copy !req
593. As to humans, I've dissec...
Copy !req
594. I've examined...
Copy !req
595. - What was the word you didn't finish?
- I can't remember.
Copy !req
596. Play the loop.
Copy !req
597. - Complete the word, monkey!
- I told you...
Copy !req
598. Complete the word!
Copy !req
599. It sounds as if I had hiccups.
Copy !req
600. Call for Dr Dixon, please.
Copy !req
601. Dr Dixon! Dr Hasslein calling Dr Dixon.
Copy !req
602. Calling Dr Dixon!
Copy !req
603. Ah, Dr Dixon. Come in.
Copy !req
604. Be good enough to administer
this to the female.
Copy !req
605. - Why? What is it?
- Sodium Pentothal. One half gram I.V.
Copy !req
606. - Dr Hasslein, I'm an animal psychiatrist...
- And a qualified vet.
Copy !req
607. We have the commission's authority.
Copy !req
608. And that of the president. Please.
Copy !req
609. Zira, I've been asked
to give you an injection...
Copy !req
610. No, you can't use that!
We only use those things for killing.
Copy !req
611. - Killing?
- No, this is not for killing, Cornelius.
Copy !req
612. This is for relaxing. It won't harm her.
Copy !req
613. - Will it harm my baby?
- No. No, it won't.
Copy !req
614. So, Zira, if you would just
come with me, please.
Copy !req
615. - Lewis, you can't use that on Zira!
- I promise...
Copy !req
616. - Please take him to his quarters.
- Lewis, you...
Copy !req
617. No, you mustn't!
Copy !req
618. Please.
Copy !req
619. Just lie down on the couch.
Copy !req
620. And bare your arm, please.
Copy !req
621. You don't have to tell me.
Copy !req
622. This has the same effect
as Grape Juice Plus.
Copy !req
623. Now count backward from ten.
Copy !req
624. Ten, nine, eight,
Copy !req
625. seven, six...
Copy !req
626. five...
Copy !req
627. four...
Copy !req
628. What comes after four?
Copy !req
629. Two.
Copy !req
630. - Thank you, Dr Dixon.
- It's customary to stay.
Copy !req
631. You worked in a room like this?
Copy !req
632. Bigger. Not so pretty.
Copy !req
633. And there you practiced...
Copy !req
634. Comparative.
Copy !req
635. Comparative what?
Copy !req
636. Anatomy?
Copy !req
637. Whose anatomies did you compare?
Copy !req
638. Apes and humans?
Copy !req
639. Zira, say "yes" if you mean yes.
Copy !req
640. Yes.
Copy !req
641. So you dissected other apes?
Copy !req
642. Yes. When they died a natural death.
Copy !req
643. - And humans too, of course.
- Yes.
Copy !req
644. As they were made available.
Copy !req
645. Available?
Copy !req
646. The gorillas hunted them for sport,
with nets and with guns.
Copy !req
647. The survivors were put in cages.
Copy !req
648. The army used some of them
for target practice.
Copy !req
649. We could take our scientific pick
of the rest.
Copy !req
650. And, in the interest of science,
you dissected,
Copy !req
651. removed and statistically compared...
Copy !req
652. Bones, muscles, tendons,
Copy !req
653. veins, arteries, kidneys, livers, hearts,
Copy !req
654. stomachs, reproductive organs,
nails, tongues,
Copy !req
655. eyes, noses, nervous systems,
Copy !req
656. the various reflexes...
Copy !req
657. Reflexes? Of the dead?
Copy !req
658. No, no. Of the living!
Copy !req
659. You can't make a dead man's knee jump
Copy !req
660. any more than you can test a corpse's
reaction to a prefrontal lobotomy!
Copy !req
661. You mean you were advanced enough
Copy !req
662. to perform experimental
brain surgery on living humans?
Copy !req
663. Oh, yes!
Copy !req
664. We even tried to stimulate
their atrophied speech centers.
Copy !req
665. Did you try to stimulate
Colonel Taylor's speech center?
Copy !req
666. Of course not! He could talk already.
Copy !req
667. When you left,
was Colonel Taylor still alive?
Copy !req
668. We loved Taylor.
Copy !req
669. We did all we could to help him,
Cornelius and I.
Copy !req
670. - Cornelius!
- She should have a nap now.
Copy !req
671. She'll get it.
Copy !req
672. - Orderly.
- Sir?
Copy !req
673. Please take the female ape to its quarters.
Copy !req
674. Yes, sir.
Copy !req
675. We have to get this
to the commission immediately.
Copy !req
676. Gentlemen.
Copy !req
677. I've received an official
notification from the president,
Copy !req
678. ratifying the recommendations
made by this commission
Copy !req
679. in light of the tape recordings
delivered to us by Dr Hasslein.
Copy !req
680. Now, if you'll just be seated,
we'll get right down to business.
Copy !req
681. Now, let me review our conclusions.
Copy !req
682. by a majority vote, the commission
finds no solid evidence for hostility
Copy !req
683. by either ape towards humans
Copy !req
684. as at present constituted
in this year of our Lord 1973.
Copy !req
685. Let me remind you
that this was by a majority vote.
Copy !req
686. The male's attitude is that
of a well-disposed academician
Copy !req
687. who studied the alleged
downfall of the human race
Copy !req
688. with the true objectivity
of a good historian.
Copy !req
689. The female's case is different in that she
committed actions against the human race
Copy !req
690. of a sort which, if committed today,
would be called atrocities.
Copy !req
691. But would they be so called
in 2,000 years" time
Copy !req
692. when it is alleged that humans
will have become dumb brutes
Copy !req
693. with the restricted intelligence of animals?
Copy !req
694. It has been pointed out
that what apes will do to humans
Copy !req
695. is no more than what humans
are now doing to beasts.
Copy !req
696. Nonetheless, the commission is
sympathetic to Dr Hasslein's conviction
Copy !req
697. that the progeny of these apes
could in centuries to come
Copy !req
698. prove an increasing threat
to the human race
Copy !req
699. and conceivably end by dominating it.
Copy !req
700. This is a risk we dare not ignore.
Copy !req
701. Therefore, the commission
unanimously recommends
Copy !req
702. that the birth of the female ape's
unborn child should be prevented
Copy !req
703. and, after its prenatal removal,
Copy !req
704. both the male and female
Copy !req
705. should humanely be rendered incapable
of bearing another.
Copy !req
706. I now declare this commission dissolved.
Copy !req
707. Savages! They are savages!
Copy !req
708. Jabbing needles into my pregnant wife!
Copy !req
709. I've done that too, dear. And worse.
Copy !req
710. Taylor thought we were savages at first.
Copy !req
711. Did they make you tell them
about Taylor, too?
Copy !req
712. They made me tell them
everything, Cornelius.
Copy !req
713. Brutes!
Copy !req
714. Shall I tell you something?
Copy !req
715. I'm glad I did. We can't live with lies.
Copy !req
716. After this, I doubt we shall
be allowed to live at all.
Copy !req
717. Do you mean that?
Copy !req
718. How long?
Copy !req
719. A week. Maybe sooner.
Copy !req
720. They treated you like dirt.
Copy !req
721. Ma'am. Sir. Chow time.
Copy !req
722. I'm not hungry.
Copy !req
723. Well, maybe somebody else is
who can't talk yet.
Copy !req
724. Come on, ma'am. It's pure vitamin C.
Copy !req
725. You better have your soup and oranges
for the sake of that little monkey.
Copy !req
726. - No, Cornelius!
- Nobody makes a fool out of my wife.
Copy !req
727. - But ought we to call for...
- We just ought to leave.
Copy !req
728. I'll be going back with Dr Hasslein soon.
I'm the one who has to tell them.
Copy !req
729. - Stevie, you gotta come help me.
- Of course. I'll come right away.
Copy !req
730. It just seems so cruel and horrible and...
I don't know. I'll see you.
Copy !req
731. - Cruel, Dr Dixon?
- Unbelievably. Zira wants her baby.
Copy !req
732. - So do I.
- But dead.
Copy !req
733. Yes.
Copy !req
734. You'd prefer the parents dead, too.
Copy !req
735. Shall we go?
Copy !req
736. Gate four.
Copy !req
737. Just a minute, sir. I'll take a look.
Copy !req
738. No, sir. The lieutenant hasn't checked in.
Copy !req
739. - Night, Charlie.
- Night, Ed.
Copy !req
740. Yes, sir, I'll tell him. "Contact the motor
pool." Yes, sir. Just as soon as I see him.
Copy !req
741. Gate four.
Copy !req
742. Oh, yes, Captain.
Copy !req
743. No, sir. The supply truck
isn't due until 0600 hours.
Copy !req
744. - Well, I'm sorry, sir.
- Good night, Charlie.
Copy !req
745. I said good night.
Copy !req
746. We haven't any way
to contact him until then.
Copy !req
747. The depot's closed, sir.
Copy !req
748. OK, sir. I'll be off duty,
but the relief comes on at 0430 hours
Copy !req
749. and I'll get him to pass the message.
Copy !req
750. Yes, sir.
Copy !req
751. Zira, what's the matter?
Copy !req
752. I think my pains have begun.
Copy !req
753. Oh, my dear.
Copy !req
754. Administration, Doctor. It's urgent.
Copy !req
755. - What happened?
- The apes killed their orderly.
Copy !req
756. - Where are they?
- On the run.
Copy !req
757. Now they've killed,
and for that they must be killed.
Copy !req
758. It has to be done before
we start a stone rolling
Copy !req
759. that'll gather enough
poison moss to kill us all!
Copy !req
760. Look. I'm going back to the camp.
I'm going to find Lewis and get help.
Copy !req
761. - No!
- Zira!
Copy !req
762. I just lost my temper with the boy.
Now, they may...
Copy !req
763. - It's better now. I can walk.
- Listen to me!
Copy !req
764. They may punish us for what we did,
but at least the baby will be born.
Copy !req
765. - Were they armed?
- No, I don't believe so.
Copy !req
766. Then there will be
no need for a shooting match.
Copy !req
767. - Not strictly speaking, no.
- I am speaking strictly, Hasslein.
Copy !req
768. Science regards these apes as unique.
Copy !req
769. The people regard them
as practically human.
Copy !req
770. Then they must be told that today's killers
could be tomorrow's mass murderers.
Copy !req
771. Of course they must. I can think of no one
better equipped emotionally than yourself
Copy !req
772. to persuade them of that possibility.
Copy !req
773. But, in a democracy, we do not
shoot unarmed suspects on sight
Copy !req
774. for a murder in which their
participation is still unproven.
Copy !req
775. I want them taken, yes. But taken alive!
Copy !req
776. - Is that clear?
- Quite clear, Mr President.
Copy !req
777. You lost, miss?
Copy !req
778. Oh, it's you, Dr Branton.
Copy !req
779. You better be careful.
There's been a murder.
Copy !req
780. - Murder?
- Yes, ma'am.
Copy !req
781. The monkeys have killed
their orderly and escaped.
Copy !req
782. What? I don't believe it.
How did it happen?
Copy !req
783. I don't know. All I know is
they've killed their orderly
Copy !req
784. and I have orders to find them.
Copy !req
785. Drive carefully, Dr Branton. There'll
be a lot of vehicles in the area tonight.
Copy !req
786. - Cornelius, what have you done?
- I didn't mean to kill him.
Copy !req
787. He was teasing Zira, and I thought I'd just
hit him with a tray. Please believe me.
Copy !req
788. I do, Cornelius, I do. But they won't.
Copy !req
789. - Where's Zira?
- She's back there, hiding in the bushes.
Copy !req
790. Stevie, she's in labor.
Copy !req
791. Oh, God. Get in.
Copy !req
792. Stevie... you won't take us
back to the camp?
Copy !req
793. Get down. I have a better idea.
Copy !req
794. Now wait a second. Just a moment.
Let me get this straight.
Copy !req
795. You are asking me to risk imprisonment
for the sake of two fugitive apes?
Copy !req
796. The answer is a thousand times
Copy !req
797. yes. Oh, yes.
Copy !req
798. I do it for you. And for Stevie.
Copy !req
799. - And for your two distinguished friends.
- Notorious now.
Copy !req
800. To hell with notoriety!
Copy !req
801. What is a husband expected to do?
Stand by and see his wife insulted?
Copy !req
802. Good God! Aren't we rude enough
to each other
Copy !req
803. without having to be rude to animals?
Copy !req
804. And, anyway, he didn't mean
to kill the boy. It was an accident.
Copy !req
805. I appreciate what you're doing, Armando.
Copy !req
806. Well, you helped deliver our last baby
and now you will deliver our next.
Copy !req
807. Lewis! What took you so long?
Copy !req
808. I had to work out some excuse.
They think I'm searching.
Copy !req
809. - Armando's been a saint.
- Oh, a minor one.
Copy !req
810. - Saint Francis would have fixed it better.
- Never!
Copy !req
811. Say hello to Heloise.
Copy !req
812. - And your goddaughter, Salome.
- Hello, Salome.
Copy !req
813. - The first chimp ever born in a circus.
- No, Los Angeles has had four.
Copy !req
814. - Los Angeles is not a circus. It's a zoo.
- So New Yorkers say.
Copy !req
815. Lewis is here.
Copy !req
816. Lewis. I was not responsible
for the death...
Copy !req
817. I know. But you will be
responsible for a birth.
Copy !req
818. - How is she?
- The pains are every five minutes now.
Copy !req
819. Every four.
Copy !req
820. Look. Look at Heloise.
Copy !req
821. She's showing an expectant mother
what to expect.
Copy !req
822. Mama.
Copy !req
823. Say it.
Copy !req
824. Don't waste your breath and strength.
Copy !req
825. You know that the child of two primitive
apes will never learn how to speak.
Copy !req
826. I'm getting into practice.
Copy !req
827. There, that's good.
Copy !req
828. Come on.
Copy !req
829. What are we gonna call...
Copy !req
830. Him.
Copy !req
831. Milo?
Copy !req
832. Congratulations.
Copy !req
833. No?
Copy !req
834. But, sir...
Copy !req
835. Captain, I'm fully aware that you've
canvassed the areas we first established.
Copy !req
836. Evidently we were wrong
because you haven't found them yet!
Copy !req
837. Thank you.
Copy !req
838. Now, Dr Dixon, can you pinpoint the date
Copy !req
839. of the baby's birth
with any degree of accuracy?
Copy !req
840. Well, I never examined her.
Copy !req
841. But, from appearances,
I'd say a week to ten days.
Copy !req
842. If it's that close, she can't
have gone far. Where do apes go?
Copy !req
843. To other apes.
Copy !req
844. Of course.
Copy !req
845. Captain, start an immediate
and systematic search
Copy !req
846. of every menagerie, every zoo,
every circus in the city.
Copy !req
847. I'll augment your force
with the city police.
Copy !req
848. And keep me informed about results,
Copy !req
849. - whether positive or negative.
- Yes, sir.
Copy !req
850. - Well, Lewis will think of something.
- I am so sorry. I had planned it all so well.
Copy !req
851. In just one month, we move on
to our winter quarters in Florida.
Copy !req
852. I could have released you in
the Everglades and, my dear friends,
Copy !req
853. you might have lived happily ever after.
Copy !req
854. But now... what can I do?
Copy !req
855. You have done enough
to make us grateful to you for ever.
Copy !req
856. I did it because I like
chimpanzees best of all apes.
Copy !req
857. And you, the best of all chimpanzees.
Copy !req
858. I did it because I hate those
who try to alter destiny,
Copy !req
859. which is the unalterable will of God.
Copy !req
860. And if it is man's destiny
one day to be dominated,
Copy !req
861. then, oh, please, God, let him
be dominated by such as you.
Copy !req
862. All I can now do to help you
Copy !req
863. is give you this... for the baby.
Copy !req
864. - It's a medal of Saint Francis ofAssisi.
- Who is he?
Copy !req
865. He was a holy man who loved
and cared for all animals.
Copy !req
866. Oh, thank you.
Copy !req
867. We'll hang it around
the baby's neck. For protection, huh?
Copy !req
868. - Thank you.
- Yes.
Copy !req
869. And now, my dear, dear friends,
Copy !req
870. before the police come
and the audience gathers,
Copy !req
871. you and your pretty baby must go.
Copy !req
872. Lewis is on his way.
Copy !req
873. - Armando.
- Yes?
Copy !req
874. I should like to say goodbye
to Heloise first.
Copy !req
875. If only she could speak,
she would say how sorry she is.
Copy !req
876. I know. But we understand each other.
Copy !req
877. All right.
Copy !req
878. This is as far as we dare to take you.
Copy !req
879. The police have road blocks
on every main exit from town.
Copy !req
880. - Here are your supplies.
- Thank you.
Copy !req
881. - Can you read a map?
- I'm an archaeologist.
Copy !req
882. I can even draw one.
Copy !req
883. All right. We're at the city limits,
at the southern edge of this oil field here.
Copy !req
884. Once you're over this hill there are
more oil wells, an abandoned refinery
Copy !req
885. and a harbor down to the southeast.
Copy !req
886. It's a kind of graveyard for old ships
that have become unseaworthy.
Copy !req
887. I used to play there as a kid. Anyway,
there's a derelict tanker at one end.
Copy !req
888. - You could hide there for a week.
- A week?
Copy !req
889. Until the commotion dies down a bit and
we can smuggle you back to the circus.
Copy !req
890. Then, as Armando says,
you can travel with them to Florida,
Copy !req
891. found your own colony in the Everglades
and live happily ever after.
Copy !req
892. It's time that you were moving on.
Copy !req
893. - Lewis.
- Yes?
Copy !req
894. If they find us... we shall be killed?
Copy !req
895. Ultimately.
Copy !req
896. Then...
Copy !req
897. give us the opportunity to kill ourselves
if that moment should come.
Copy !req
898. Please?
Copy !req
899. I shouldn't do this,
but I guessed you might ask.
Copy !req
900. You're the second human I've kissed.
Copy !req
901. And you are the first.
Copy !req
902. Come along, Zira! Now, don't dawdle.
Copy !req
903. - The ape with the kid?
- Heloise?
Copy !req
904. Oh, she's been with the circus
seven years now.
Copy !req
905. And the baby's birth
was registered 16 days ago.
Copy !req
906. Look how he's growing. The first
chimpanzee ever to be born in a circus!
Copy !req
907. Do you realize
what a distinction that is, huh?
Copy !req
908. It's like being the first fish
to be born on dry land.
Copy !req
909. Nothing.
Copy !req
910. Or the first bird to be born without an egg.
Copy !req
911. It is like being the first baby
to be born on the moon.
Copy !req
912. It's like being the...
Copy !req
913. - Negative!
- We'll catch "em sooner or later.
Copy !req
914. That's what I'm worried about - later.
Later we'll do something about pollution.
Copy !req
915. Later we'll tackle
the population explosion.
Copy !req
916. Later we'll do something
about the nuclear war.
Copy !req
917. We think we got all the time in the world.
Copy !req
918. How much time has the world got?
Copy !req
919. Somebody has to begin to care.
Copy !req
920. Oh! Like stars in space. Isn't it beautiful?
Copy !req
921. Yes, it is. From here.
Copy !req
922. We must move on.
Copy !req
923. Who found it?
Copy !req
924. The field superintendent
on a service check.
Copy !req
925. It was hidden here in the workings.
I guess she didn't need this any more.
Copy !req
926. So why don't we get moving?
Copy !req
927. It's a big area.
We've called for helicopters.
Copy !req
928. - How long will they be?
- 20 minutes.
Copy !req
929. - Why so long?
- They're running down a fire report.
Copy !req
930. - Keep me posted.
- Yes, sir.
Copy !req
931. - What's the matter?
- They found Zira's suitcase.
Copy !req
932. - Did Lewis really play here?
- Oh, it was probably cleaner then.
Copy !req
933. It stinks of man.
Copy !req
934. Oh, no, no. That's oil. And dead fish.
Copy !req
935. Is that what man wanted oil for?
To kill fish?
Copy !req
936. You don't like them very much, do you?
Copy !req
937. - Who?
- Humans.
Copy !req
938. We've met hundreds
since we've been here,
Copy !req
939. and I trust... three.
Copy !req
940. - He wants feeding.
- Yes, well...
Copy !req
941. Well, there must be someplace
cleaner than this.
Copy !req
942. I'll look around.
Copy !req
943. Cornelius?
Copy !req
944. I see you've had your baby, Zira.
Copy !req
945. The Presidential Commission has
empowered me to take it in my care.
Copy !req
946. Give it to me.
Copy !req
947. Cornelius!
Copy !req
948. Stevie.
Copy !req
949. Zira.
Copy !req
950. I want that baby.
If you won't give it to me, I'll shoot.
Copy !req
951. My God, stop him!
Copy !req
952. No!
Copy !req
953. Keep your men here! Come on!
Copy !req
954. What's she doing?
Copy !req
955. Oh, my God.
Copy !req
956. All hands on the guy lines.
Copy !req
957. Drop the bail ring!
Copy !req
958. All right, all extra hands in the back yards
to the quarter poles! On the double.
Copy !req
959. As soon as you get that canvas packed,
I want every hand in the menagerie tent.
Copy !req
960. Intelligent creature.
Copy !req