Conquest of the Planet of the Apes - crew, film crew

The entire team, the film crew of the film "Conquest of the Planet of the Apes"
Conquest of the Planet of the Apes (1972)
Timing: 1:28 (88 min)
Conquest of the Planet of the Apes - TMDB rating
6.177/10
906
Conquest of the Planet of the Apes - Kinopoisk rating
6.217/10
4871
Conquest of the Planet of the Apes - IMDB rating
6.1/10
40000

Film crew

Director

Producer

Arthur P. Jacobs
Producer

Editor

Marjorie Fowler
Editor
Alan Jaggs
Editor

Art Direction

Philip M. Jefferies
Art Direction

Costume Design

Morton Haack
Costume Design

Stunts

Photo Alan Gibbs #27771Photo Alan Gibbs #27772
Alan Gibbs
Stunts
Glenn Randall Jr.
Stunts
Richard E. Butler
Stunts
Photo Eddie Smith #27773
Eddie Smith
Stunts
Photo Tony Brubaker #33739
Tony Brubaker
Stunts
Fred Waugh
Stunts
Photo Eddie Hice #74755
Eddie Hice
Stunts
Whitey Hughes
Stunts
Regina Parton
Stunts
Regis Parton
Stunts
Troy Melton
Stunts
Alex Sharp
Stunts
Paula Crist
Stunts
Richard Washington
Stunts

Production Design

Philip M. Jefferies
Production Design

Stunt Coordinator

Paul Stader
Stunt Coordinator

Set Decoration

Norman Rockett
Set Decoration

Makeup Artist

Joe DiBella
Makeup Artist
Jack Barron
Makeup Artist

Original Music Composer

Tom Scott
Original Music Composer

Unit Production Manager

William Eckhardt
Unit Production Manager

Associate Producer

Second Assistant Director

Jack Stubbs
Second Assistant Director

Director of Photography

Bruce Surtees
Director of Photography

Hairstylist

Carol Pershing
Hairstylist
Jan Van Uchelen
Hairstylist

Screenplay

Photo Paul Dehn #74752
Paul Dehn
Screenplay

Special Effects

Johnny Borgese
Special Effects

Characters

Makeup Supervisor

Makeup Designer

John Chambers
Makeup Designer

Special Effects Makeup Artist

Verne Langdon
Special Effects Makeup Artist

Assistant Director

David 'Buck' Hall
Assistant Director

Unit Publicist

Jack Hirshberg
Unit Publicist

Sound

Don J. Bassman
Sound
Herman Lewis
Sound

Title Designer

Don Record
Title Designer

What's left behind the scenes

  • Screenwriter Paul Dehn viewed the film as an attempt to look at the American civil rights movement of the late 1960s and early 1970s from an ape's perspective.
  • The film's plot began with a scene of police killing an escaped ape. The police approached the body and saw open wounds and scars covering the corpse, which would have shown the nightmarish conditions of the apes reduced to the status of slaves. This scene was considered too repulsive and was not included in the film.
  • Director J. Lee Thompson tried to film as many long shots as possible, and used black and red colors in the rebellion scene. All of this was necessary to hide the flaws in the actors' ape makeup, as well as to create the impression that battles were taking place between hundreds of extras throughout the city, when in reality it was only a few dozen people in a couple of blocks.
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