The last free humans—a ragged fleet of survivors orbiting the Pacific in a repurposed nuclear submarine—had dismissed the apes as clever but illiterate beasts. Then the apes intercepted their supply drones using radio frequencies lifted from a 1975 FCC technical manual. Then the apes jammed their sonar using acoustic warfare patterns from a 1944 Navy training film. Then the apes broadcast a single message on all channels:
When fans search for they are not usually looking to steal a $3.99 rental. They are looking for the liminal space of the film—the deleted scenes, the TV spots, the 240p encodes that ran on iPods in 2012, the commentary tracks ripped from long-scratched CDs. rise of the planet of the apes internet archive
The legal rulings that have recently gone against the Internet Archive, particularly regarding controlled digital lending, have forced the removal of thousands of items. The removal of films like Rise of the Planet of the Apes signals a narrowing of the public domain. While corporations have a legal right to their intellectual property, the aggressive removal of these works from archives creates a "dark age" of accessibility. If a film is not currently profitable for a studio to stream, and it is illegal for an archive to host it, the work effectively ceases to exist for The last free humans—a ragged fleet of survivors
Internet Archive hosts a variety of archival materials related to the Planet of the Apes Then the apes broadcast a single message on