- The only good human... is a dead human!
- General Ursus
General Ursus was a gorilla and a leading official of Ape City. He instigated the invasion of the Forbidden Zone, which led to the destruction of Earth. As such, he serves as the primary antagonist of Beneath the Planet of the Apes.
Biography
Early life
Ursus was an ape military commander who lived in the East Coast Ape City during the latter half of the 40th century. Eventually rising to the rank of General, Ursus became the highest ranking military official answering only to the Minister of Science, Dr. Zaius, and was possessed of an insane vision of conquest. Ursus sent a scouting expedition into the Forbidden Zone. A number of his scouts disappeared, and one returned telling harrowing stories of ape crucifixions and great walls of fire. Consulting with Zaius and other elder ape statesmen, Ursus concluded that whatever lived in the Forbidden Zone was a threat to simian survival.
Ursus had an intense rivalry with Marcus, head of the Simian Secret Security Police Force, and shortly after the arrival of astronaut George Taylor, Ursus and Dr. Maximus tried to have the police force absorbed into the army to launch an exploration of the Forbidden Zone in search of heretical apes or some other sentient (non-human) creatures, through an 'Ape City Security and Defence Declaration'. When his plan was rejected, he angrily left with his army for manoeuvres, just before news broke about Taylor speaking.
Quest for new growth
In a rousing speech delivered before a large congregation of apes, Ursus rallied the cause of war, and proposed a mounted invasion into the Forbidden Zone. The Ursus speech gained momentum primarily through a doctrine of fear. He emphasized the fact that the aggressors from the Forbidden Zone threatened the community's food supply, in tandem with the recent crop failures had caused a downturn in the economy of Ape City. Ursus concluded his speech with the remarks that "if they live, and live they do, then they must eat!" Dr. Zaius was at first reluctant to allow Ursus so much influence over his contemporaries, but soon came to realize the importance of the General's march to war and goes along with his agitation for different motives, while the chimpanzees were much more reluctant.
Journey to the Forbidden Zone
Ursus personally led the march into the Forbidden Zone, despite the protests of several pacifist chimpanzees. They arrived at the devastated ruins of what was once New York City. Other than Dr. Zaius, few apes (including Ursus) were aware that the Forbidden Zone was "once a paradise" destroyed ages ago by mankind's warlike nature.
The human settlement in the Forbidden Zone was actually a cult of subspecies mutants. Though their bodies had been ravaged by the effects of atomic radiation, their minds were highly developed and they possessed the ability to project their thoughts into the minds of others, as well create fantastic illusions.
Gorilla's war
The mutants attempted to stave off the invasion by projecting various images of apes nailed upside down to crosses on fire. Ursus himself even reeled when the visage of a venerable ape spiritual leader, the Lawgiver, appeared before them with blood pouring out of cracks in his face. While the gorilla soldiers panicked, it was Dr. Zaius who saw through the fallacy and boldly rode into the flames.
Once bypassing the sordid hallucinations, Ursus and his army marched into the ruins of the Forbidden Zone. They found the mutants at the altar of a cathedral. The movement's leader, Mendez XXVI, prostrated himself before a preserved relic of the 20th century – the Alpha-Omega Bomb. Ursus directed his Sergeant who then shot Mendez dead, while his gorilla lieutenants scoured the catacombs beneath the city wiping out as many mutants as they could find.
The General, unaware of the bomb's true potential, ordered his men to pull it down from the altar with ropes and a pulley. Slamming upon the stone floor, the shell casing of the missile cracked open, releasing a deadly gas.
Final battle
Unbeknownst to Ursus at the time, the mutants had two human astronauts imprisoned within their citadel, Colonel George Taylor and astronaut John Brent. Taylor and Brent had escaped confinement and raced to the altar room in a desperate effort to disable the Doomsday bomb. Zaius spots Taylor and Ursus shoots at Taylor wounding him, in return Brent who had acquired a rifle perched himself on a riser above the altar and took aim at Ursus, Brent opens fire and shoots a bullet into Ursus causing him to topple over and fall down a few steps on the ground where the ape General lay motionless and dead.
Even if Brent's shot didn't fell the surly gorilla, he would have been killed regardless. Moments after Ursus' death, astronaut Taylor, dying from his own wound, fell upon the Alpha-Omega launch controls, detonating the bomb, thereby destroying the entire world.
In other media
In BOOM! Studios' comics series Betrayal of the Planet of the Apes, Exile on the Planet of the Apes and Planet of the Apes: Cataclysm, Ursus time before Taylor's arrival is explored. He was a henchman for the anti-human orangutan Councilor Tenebris, and on his orders organised the murders of Doctor Cato and Councilor Quintessa, and tried to murder General Aleron during his incarceration at The Reef. Although Doctor Zaius had not agreed with Tenebris' actions, he came to depend on Ursus during the unrest that followed the destruction of the Moon. Ursus' heavy-handed response to chimp protests almost caused an ape civil war but this was narrowly avoided. Doctor Milo came to believe that Ursus was actually a human mutant from the Forbidden Zone using illusion to disguise himself and fomenting trouble in Ape City, and his reporting back to two mutants after order had been restored to the city would seem to confirm this, or at least that Ursus was an agent of the mutants.
In the intercompany crossover Star Trek/Planet of the Apes: The Primate Directive, Ursus was part of a small faction of gorillas who was sent to repel rogue gorilla general Marius. Ursus was disgusted that Marius had betrayed the ape society in his mad attempt to conquer Ape City. There was a slight skirmish between the two generals yet Ursus prevailed against Marius. He was in fact going to kill Ursus with his Klingon disruptor weapon, but one of Marius' own men betrayed him and saved Ursus.
The 2018 novel Death of the Planet of the Apes details Ursus early life. He had been an orphan and a rebellious youth, but was raised by Kananaios, a preacher and friend of Sabian. His religious zeal fuelled his belief in his destiny as conqueror of the Forbidden Zone.
Notes
- Pierre Boulle's 'Planet of the Men' initial treatment for a sequel featured a character called 'Field Marshall Urus', the gorilla head of the ape army.[2] It seems unlikely that this was a coincidence. The name 'Urus' probably came from the leader of the Mongol 'White Horde', Khan Urus (a descendent of Genghis Khan), who led a doomed attack on the Empire of Timur. A Roman gladiator character called 'Ursus' - first appearing in the Polish novel Quo Vadis - was the star of a number of Italian-made adventure films in the early sixties, in one of which (Ursus and the Tartar Princess) Ursus had to fight a powerful Central Asian Khan.
- An incident involving General Ursus and a group of chimpanzee protestors was intended to reflect the social controversy surrounding the Vietnam War. [3]
- In Paul Dehn's first treatment for the movie, Ursus is captured from the battlefield by renegade chimpanzee students and taken back to Ape City as their prisoner. He thus escapes the limited atomic explosion, only to find himself locked in the cells previously occupied by humans.[4]
- Urko, from the 1974 Planet of the Apes television series, is an analog of General Ursus, indeed in the earliest script treatments, the character was called 'Ursus'. This was still his name when actor Mark Lenard auditioned for the part in May 1974.[5] The character's name then evolved to 'Urso' - the actors reportedly had difficulty saying this word through the makeup[6] - before becoming 'Urko' during the final devolopment stages.
- In UbiSoft/Fox Interactive’s 'Planet Of The Apes' GameBoy, Ursus is again shown leading an invasion of the mutant city, but is killed by astronaut Ben, who then disarms the Alpha-Omega Bomb.
Trivia
- Ursus' war-cry of "The only good human is a dead human!" was very similar to dialogue from a deleted scene from Planet of the Apes, in which the Hunt Leader declares "I still say the only good human is a dead human." In addition, Pierre Boulle's Planet of the Men screenplay had Taylor's upstart son Sirius proclaim that "the only good ape is a dead ape!" The origin of the saying and it's many variations is attributed to General Philip Sheridan, overseer the United States Indian Territory, who in 1869 said "The only good Indian is a dead Indian."
- According to The Ape News newspaper distributed in theatres showing the movie in 1970, Ursus' title was 'Commander in Chief'.[7]
- In 1975 the Mego Corporation produced an 8" General Ursus action figure as part of their Planet of the Apes toyline. Subsequent re-issues of the toy were often confused with the Urko action figure, which used many of the same molds and costume pieces as the Ursus doll. [8]
- UbiSoft/Fox Interactive’s 'Planet of the Apes' Game for PC included another version of Ursus.
- National Entertainment Collectibles Association released a 6" General Ursus action figure during the fall of 2014 as part of their Planet of the Apes Classic Series 2 figure line.
Appearances
- Beneath the Planet of the Apes
- Beneath the Planet of the Apes (comic)
- Beneath the Planet of the Apes (novel)
- Beneath the Planet of the Apes (Power Records)
- Planet of the Apes Magazine: Beneath the Planet of the Apes
- Adventures on the Planet of the Apes: Beneath the Planet of the Apes
- UbiSoft/Fox Interactive’s 'Planet Of The Apes' GameBoy
- Neil Foster & Michael Whitty's Within The Planet Of The Apes (fan fiction)
- Conspiracy of the Planet of the Apes
- Betrayal of the Planet of the Apes
- Exile on the Planet of the Apes
- Planet of the Apes: Cataclysm
- Star Trek/Planet of the Apes: The Primate Directive (comic)
- Death of the Planet of the Apes
External Links
References
- ↑ 3955 versus 3978
- ↑ 'Planet of the Men', part 1, at Hunter's Planet of the Apes Script Archive
- ↑ Behind the Planet of the Apes, 20th Century Fox, 1998
- ↑ Planet of the Apes Revisited Treatment at Hunter's Planet of the Apes Scripts Archive
- ↑ Urko Unleashed, by Chris Claremont - 'Planet of the Apes' UK #22 (22 March 1975)
- ↑ Planet of the Apes: Monkeying with the Timeline
- ↑ 'Beneath the Planet of the Apes' promotional material
- ↑ Planet of the Apes Gallery, Mego Museum