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    Home»Smart Home»You Damned Dirty Apes! How to Watch All the Planet of the Apes Movies and TV Shows in Order
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    You Damned Dirty Apes! How to Watch All the Planet of the Apes Movies and TV Shows in Order

    adminBy adminNovember 8, 2025No Comments9 Mins Read
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    You Damned Dirty Apes! How to Watch All the Planet of the Apes Movies and TV Shows in Order
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    Over 60 years ago, author Pierre Boulle’s La Planete des singes debuted in France and the US. On these shores, it was renamed Planet of the Apes (which is much better than the UK’s hokey name for it: Monkey Planet). The novel was a massive hit even though Boulle thought it wasn’t his best. (In his defense, he did write The Bridge Over the River Kwai.)

    The book was so popular that the owner of the movie rights for the US hired the legendary Rod Serling, creator of The Twilight Zone, to adapt it for the screen. Once star Charlton Heston was on board, 20th Century Fox decided to make it. The studio did so for almost half the original budget. The screenplay was also rewritten to make the world more primitive (and thus less costly), but kept Serling’s amazing new twist ending. 

    It probably shouldn’t have worked.

    But it did. The success of the original in 1968 led to four sequels up through 1973, a couple of TV series (including one for kids!), a remake almost 30 years later, and the latest four films, which rebooted everything with fantastic new motion-capture technology for the apes, replacing the (honorary) Oscar-winning makeup of the originals. 

    Do you want to watch every single scene of the Planet of the Apes (aka PotA) franchise on streaming services? Some of them require buying or renting digital copies. We’ll point them out as we examine the whole franchise and beyond. 

    The Original, Classic Films

    Almost everyone who’s into Sci-Fi has seen the original movie. It is widely hailed as one of the true greats, winning accolades from the Academy, the American Film Institute (“Take your stinking paws off me, you damned dirty ape!” is considered AFI’s 66th favorite movie quote of all time), and the National Film Registry. The sequels tend to diminish as they go. However, the makeup is always stellar, as are the performances of series star Roddy McDowall, first as Cornelius, later as his son Caesar. 

    All five are available to buy or rent on just about every streaming platform that supports purchases: Apple TV, Google Play, Prime Video, Microsoft, Fandango at Home (Vudu), and YouTube. You can also purchase the Blu-ray 40th anniversary Planet of the Apes Legacy Collection with all five films.

    The Forgotten Television Series

    After the films ended, a PotA TV series was commissioned in 1974 and ran on CBS. It was canceled by the first season’s halfway point, running only 14 episodes. The plot involved two astronauts traveling through the same time warp as the characters in the first movie and landing on a future Earth (apparently 900 years before Charlton Heston arrived). They encounter the same monkey planet and team up with a chimpanzee named Galen after he realizes the truth: humans were not always subservient to apes. The two humans and one chimp travel the countryside, helping out strangers at each stop while always on the run from the villainous gorilla General Urko. Yeah, just like on The Fugitive. Seventies TV didn’t care to reinvent the wheel.

    The big selling point: PotA’s MVP film star, Roddy McDowall, returned for the show to play Galen. (Hey, he even wore the full works on The Carol Burnett Show that year.)

    Urko is also sci-fi royalty. Under the mask is Mark Lenard, the famed character actor who played Spock’s dad on Star Trek. 

    Later, episodes of the series were reworked as “TV movies” for syndication in the 1980s by re-cutting select episodes. They were given terrible names (episode titles in parentheses):

    • Back to the Planet of the Apes (“Escape from Tomorrow” and “The Trap”)

    • Forgotten City of the Planet of the Apes (“Gladiators” and “Legacy”)

    • Treachery and Greed on the Planet of the Apes (“Horse Race” and “The Tyrant”)

    • Life, Liberty, and Pursuit on the Planet of the Apes (“The Surgeon” and “The Interrogation”)

    • Farewell to the Planet of the Apes (“Tomorrow’s Tide” and “Up Above The World So High”)

    You can’t officially stream these or even buy or rent them, but you can buy the complete series on DVD. There are also many illegal uploads of episodes on YouTube. 

    PotA: The Animated Series

    Produced by DePatie–Freleng Enterprises and run by the co-creator of Johnny Quest, the animated Return to the Planet of the Apes took the franchise in new (or old) directions, making the ape society much more high-tech and advanced, which is more in keeping with the original novel. Yet somehow, this was targeted at kids.

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    Like the live-action show, it only lasted a handful of episodes (13), which NBC burned off in three months on Saturday mornings at 11 a.m., never even finishing the story (which essentially retells the first movie, but with fewer scantily clad humans).

    You can stream it on YouTube, but it’s not exactly official, so don’t expect it to withstand a copyright cease-and-desist. However, it did get a DVD collection release in 2006, if you can still find it. 

    Spoof Time in South America

    The franchise is far from bulletproof when it comes to satire, as proven first by a 1976 film called Brazilian Planet of the Apes in English, but originally O Trapalhão no Planalto dos Macacos. The plot’s essentially the same but involves aeronauts in a balloon instead of astronauts who land on an island, not a future planet. It was created by a famed Brazilian comedy troupe of the time. You can stream it on YouTube in several parts. 

    The Simpsons: From Chimpan-A to Chimpan-Z

    Even among the stellar seventh season of The Simpsons, episode 19 from 1996 is legendary. It’s called “A Fish Called Selma,” and it features (among many other jokes) a stage musical adaptation of PotA starring Troy McClure (Phil Hartman). If you haven’t seen apes breakdancing to “Help Me, Dr. Zaius,” then you’re not really a fan. Like all episodes of The Simpsons, you can find it on Disney+.  

    The Documentary 30 Years in the Making

    Behind the Planet of the Apes (1998) is a behind-the-scenes documentary made for American Movie Classics (AMC) to celebrate the 30th anniversary of the first film. Can you stream it? Of course not officially, but you can buy the DVD or check on YouTube.

    Recommended by Our Editors

    Tim Burton’s Remake

    In the 1980s and 1990s, there were numerous attempts to revive the franchise. Directors like Peter Jackson, Oliver Stone, Chris Columbus, and James Cameron all took a whack at it, and Arnold Schwarzenegger was attached for a while. None of these efforts took off. 

    In 2000, 20th Century Fox finally went full steam ahead into remaking the films, with hopes for future installments. Director Tim Burton got the job to direct, with plans for a “re-imagining.” Everything about it was rushed, but the make-up effects by the legendary Rick Baker were good to go since he’d been working on all the previous attempts for years. Released in 2001, the film had a great opening weekend and broke some records, but ultimately, it is considered a dud. The twist ending attempted to replicate the thrills of the 1968 original, but it ultimately came across as weird, despite adhering more closely to the book.

    Anyway, can you stream it? Yes, you can. 

    But do you want to? It is, after all, a winner of the Golden Raspberry for Worst Remake. 

    Reboot for the Apocalyptic Win

    These films are spoken of with (almost) the same hallowed tones used for the 1968 original. Fox got this franchise right when it rebooted things in director Rupert Wyatt’s Rise of. It paid to go in a direction that didn’t retell the original, nor did it care at all about the established lore. Instead, the films have a somewhat plausible “uplift” premise, depicting what would happen if man handed over increased intelligence to simians. 

    With Dawn and War, Matt Reeves ably directed the films; he has since moved on to The Batman. The latest, Kingdom of, was helmed by Wes Ball, who directed the Maze Runner trilogy. 

    The true MVP, however, is Andy “Gollum” Serkis, who plays Caesar in the first three films. The master of motion-capture characters, he fully makes every move of the CGI chimp come to life. 

    You can buy the first three in a Blu-ray or 4K box set, or get it with Kingdom in a Blu-Ray bundle.

    About Our Expert

    Eric Griffith

    Senior Editor, Features

    Experience

    I’ve been writing about computers, the internet, and technology professionally since 1992, more than half of that time with PCMag. I arrived at the end of the print era of PC Magazine as a senior writer. I served for a time as managing editor of business coverage before settling back into the features team for the last decade and a half. I write features on all tech topics, plus I handle several special projects, including the Readers’ Choice and Business Choice surveys and yearly coverage of the Best ISPs and Best Gaming ISPs, Best Products of the Year, and Best Brands (plus the Best Brands for Tech Support, Longevity, and Reliability).

    I started in tech publishing right out of college, writing and editing stories about hardware and development tools. I migrated to software and hardware coverage for families, and I spent several years exclusively writing about the then-burgeoning technology called Wi-Fi. I was on the founding staff of several magazines, including Windows Sources, FamilyPC, and Access Internet Magazine. All of which are now defunct, and it’s not my fault. I have freelanced for publications as diverse as Sony Style, Playboy.com, and Flux. I got my degree at Ithaca College in, of all things, television/radio. But I minored in writing so I’d have a future.

    In my long-lost free time, I wrote some novels, a couple of which are not just on my hard drive: BETA TEST (“an unusually lighthearted apocalyptic tale,” according to Publishers’ Weekly) and a YA book called KALI: THE GHOSTING OF SEPULCHER BAY. Go get them on Kindle.

    I work from my home in Ithaca, NY, and did it long before pandemics made it cool.

    Read Full Bio

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