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Planeta dos Macacos - O Confronto -2014- BluRay...

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Planeta dos Macacos - O Confronto -2014- BluRay...

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Planeta dos Macacos - O Confronto -2014- BluRay...

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Hi there - I'm Lindsay.

I started Beyond the Worksheet back in 2009 after realizing that the students who needed the most support had the least resources built for them.

So I created clear, scaffolded math lessons that actually help struggling learners make sense of the content.

Fifteen years later, I’m still designing every resource with one goal: less stress for teachers, more clarity for students.

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Planeta Dos Macacos - O Confronto -2014- Bluray... -

If Caesar represents a Lockean desire for contract and co-existence, Koba (Toby Kebbell) represents Frantz Fanon’s model of decolonization through violence. Koba’s body—scarred from laboratory experiments—is a walking archive of human cruelty. The Blu-Ray’s high dynamic range (HDR) rendering makes these scars visceral, transforming his body into a text of justified rage.

By sparing Koba (before Koba’s own pride causes his fall), Caesar rejects the human logic of execution. Yet the film offers no catharsis. The final shot, a low-angle close-up of Caesar looking directly into the camera (a direct reference to the 1968 original), asks the audience: Who is the animal? The Blu-Ray’s freeze-frame capability reveals Caesar’s eyes are not triumphant, but horrified—not by Koba, but by his own capacity for vengeful anger. The “confrontation” is ultimately internal. Planeta dos Macacos - O Confronto -2014- BluRay...

The climactic battle on the high-rise tower is a masterclass in spatial politics. Humans and apes fight not for land, but for the “vision” of the future. The tower’s collapsing structure symbolizes the collapse of the colonial/primitive binary. Notably, the decisive moment is not a fistfight but an act of seeing. Caesar watches through a sniper’s scope as Koba dangles from a ledge. The scope’s crosshairs—a human technology of killing—become Caesar’s moral crucible. If Caesar represents a Lockean desire for contract

While Rise of the Planet of the Apes (2011) was a Promethean tragedy of scientific hubris, Dawn is a political one. Set a decade after the Simian Flu has decimated humanity, the film presents a “State of Nature” not unlike that described by Thomas Hobbes—a condition of perpetual fear and potential war. However, Reeves complicates this by granting both sides valid, incompatible claims to sovereignty. Humans, led by Malcolm (Jason Clarke), seek to restore a prelapsarian technological order by reactivating a hydroelectric dam. Apes, led by Caesar (Andy Serkis), seek to secure their nascent nation, Ape Colony, against the species that once enslaved them. By sparing Koba (before Koba’s own pride causes