NOVA: Ape Genius (2008)

NOVA: Ape Genius (2008)
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PBS's NOVA: Ape Genius begins with a remarkable sight never before glimpsed by the general public and seldom noted by scientific researchers; at a cordoned-off, controlled research locale in Fongoli, Senegal, a female chimp breaks a branch off of a tree; hones it and sharpens it with her teeth, thereby creating a deadly weapon; and promptly uses it to murder a bushbaby cowering in the interior of a hollowed tree. As the program notes, primate-focused zoologists considered this a massive breakthrough for both zoology and science in general. Yet in truth, this represents only the tip of the proverbial iceberg - one of many new insights about apes attained during a period with the world on the cusp of intimate behavioral knowledge of primates. Time and again, related discoveries continually lead researchers to profound conclusions about apes' capacities for 'creative intelligence.' This, in turn, prompts yet another question: if apes possess creative intelligence, what constitutes the key cerebral difference separating primates from homo sapiens? Ape Genius explores this question with a great attention to scientific detail, with visits to the grassy plains of Africa and research laboratories on several continents including Europe, Asia and North America; in the process, it unveils aspects of primate behavior long thought untenable, contrasts differences between the minds of different ape species, and ultimately hones in on the key cerebral differences that separate apes from human beings. ~ Nathan Southern, Rovi

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Director(s):
John Rubin
Format(s):
DVD
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Synopsis of NOVA: Ape Genius

PBS's NOVA: Ape Genius begins with a remarkable sight never before glimpsed by the general public and seldom noted by scientific researchers; at a cordoned-off, controlled research locale in Fongoli, Senegal, a female chimp breaks a branch off of a tree; hones it and sharpens it with her teeth, thereby creating a deadly weapon; and promptly uses it to murder a bushbaby cowering in the interior of a hollowed tree. As the program notes, primate-focused zoologists considered this a massive breakthrough for both zoology and science in general. Yet in truth, this represents only the tip of the proverbial iceberg - one of many new insights about apes attained during a period with the world on the cusp of intimate behavioral knowledge of primates. Time and again, related discoveries continually lead researchers to profound conclusions about apes' capacities for 'creative intelligence.' This, in turn, prompts yet another question: if apes possess creative intelligence, what constitutes the key cerebral difference separating primates from homo sapiens? Ape Genius explores this question with a great attention to scientific detail, with visits to the grassy plains of Africa and research laboratories on several continents including Europe, Asia and North America; in the process, it unveils aspects of primate behavior long thought untenable, contrasts differences between the minds of different ape species, and ultimately hones in on the key cerebral differences that separate apes from human beings. ~ Nathan Southern, Rovi

Theatrical Feature Running Time:
54 mins
Director(s):
John Rubin
Writer(s):
John Rubin
Producer(s):
John Rubin
Categories:
Documentary
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Samuel Y.

if you like science, research, and unanswered questions - you'll love this one. i thought it was brilliant. it follows recent discoveries on chimp behavior in the wild, shows a large number of current behavioral trials conducted on chimps in research facilities and compares these to similar experiments conducted on human children. though the film was thorough in answering many previously unresolved questions, it did not tidy everything up in simple explanations, leaving you curious and dazzled. among NOVA & National Geographic or similar shows, i felt it was one of the best i've seen. well done NOVA.

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P T.

It's an ok movie. Interesting but not much for entertainment value. After watching this movie I walk away with an even greater respect and appreciation of chimps, apes...and feel they should all be protected as they are so much like us and they are possibly the most intelligent animals outside of humans. Oh you should see the big smile on the young chimp when he's dangling from a rope while playing in the water; the scientist describes it as joy to the point of hysteria (or something like that.) I would never doubt that we evolved from them or vice versa.

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