What did Noa see in the telescope?
Whatever Noa seen in the telescope surely thrilled his friends and himself. However, as Noa and the other characters never quite expose what was so thrilling, the audience's imagination is left entirely free to shape the ending. Even filmmaker Wes Ball has been evasive on the actual goal of Noa's discovery and the impact it will have on the several ape nations. Although space has always been essential to Planet of the Apes, this film is significantly more about Earth than about the abyss beyond it.
Teague claims it is not the Icarus, but he might not be right on the Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes finale. His quotation is full of several hints that Teague is merely hypothesizing instead of offering a definitive solution on the telescope. Often expressing "I hope," "I don't think," and "I want," he also shows that Teague has much understanding of the actual reality Noa observes from the telescope. Teague seems now to be guessing about Noa's future.
Whether Noa Spots Ship From Original Planet of the Apes Movie In Kingdom's Ending Gets Candid Reaction From Star
Owen Teague's dilemma about what Noa seen through the telescope at the end of Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes still haunles him. Acting in the current hit, the actor portrayed the newest main ape in the Planet of the Apes series. It occurs centuries following the death of Caesar. At the conclusion, Noa fervently peers through a telescope and makes an unusual discovery; but, the spectator is never really shown what Noa is really seeing. The riddle still exists.
Teague chose to ignore one likely choice in an interview with Forbes. Although some hypotheses said Noa saw the Icarus, the ship carrying the original human stars of 1968's Planet of the Apes, Teague said he most certainly did not see the astronauts returning home. It had to be another far-off discovery since they fall too early in the Planet of the Apes chronicle. See his complete quotation below:
The Trip Still Continues
Clearly, the sequel to Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes will center on what Noa observed. It could show that he observed a different ship loaded with human passengers, a wandering satellite, maybe a comet or black hole. Other planets could also pique Noa's interest and lead to an apathetic culture among the apes about space exploration. Although there are numerous other theories, Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes most definitely does not refer to the Icarus for all the reasons Teague mentioned.
Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes is the next Apes film set several years following the events of War for the Planet of the Apes. Ape clans have settled in the oasis Caesar planned for colonization, but people have returned to their animalistic nature in absence. Now caught between slavery and freedom, Ape clan outlays will support a fresh developing community.
The Final Scene of the Movie
"Based on timing, we are not far enough in the future yet to get there, hence I doubt they witness the Icarus. The 1968 film occurs in 3,000,000, roughly [3978]. It is far in the future. In the scene of crash-landing, the time is shown. We are in 2300 or 2400, therefore I do not believe we are yet there; we are just 300 or 400 hundred years after Caesar. We have a long road ahead to reach the "68 Apes movie society," hence I do not yet wish to be there. I want it to link up and at some point I hope it will do. In Kingdom we establish the concept of the Lawgiver as Raka calls Caesar the Lawgiver, thus I want to find out what Noa's part is in the development of the Dr. Zaius-kind of universe. [It begs questions about how that phrase gets passed down over the years]. Using that term, what does Noa do? I doubt it's the Icarus. It seems more to me to be a symbolic concept. Noa has seen it through that telescope, and they both seem to know that more is out there. Noa is starting to study history. He is starting to see the world and even at the end of the film he totally misses what is happening. The actual history is unknown to him. Though he hasn't read books, he is aware he can and will find out. Mae likewise finds that monkeys are not what she had assumed. At the end, there are many contradicting views; I believe that this reflects the meaning of that ending.
Leading the Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes as Cornelius is Owen Teague. But with whom else is he starring, and what roles do they play?