Tuesday, April 23, 2013

#981. King Kong (1933)


Directed By: Merian C. Cooper, Ernest B. Schoedsack

Starring: Fay Wray, Robert Armstrong, Bruce Cabot




Tag line: "The Most Awesome Thriller Of All Time"

Trivia: Jean Harlow refused the lead part in this movie







In 1933, a teenage boy walked into Graumann’s Chinese Theater on Hollywood Blvd. to see a movie, and when he emerged two hours later, the course of his life had been forever changed. 

The movie was King Kong, and the boy was Ray Harryhausen. 

The fact that King Kong was responsible for stirring the imagination of the cinema’s greatest stop-motion animator - the creative mind behind such classic fantasy films as Jason and the Argonauts and Clash of the Titans - is enough to ensure it a place of honor in the annals of motion picture history.

Of course, the movie itself ain’t so bad, either.

Directed by Merian C. Cooper and Ernest B. Schoedsack, King Kong opens on the docks of New York harbor. Filmmaker Carl Denham (Robert Armstrong) and his crew, including new leading lady Ann Darrow (Fay Wray), have just set sail for a remote island that will serve as the backdrop for their latest adventure picture. 

But soon after the troupe arrives at their destination, Ann is kidnapped by natives and offered as a sacrifice to Kong, a giant ape that carries the poor girl off into the jungle. 

The ship’s first mate, Jack Driscoll (Bruce Cabot), organizes a rescue party to save Ann, an undertaking that leads to the eventual capture of the mighty Kong. Figuring New Yorkers will pay a hefty sum to see such an unusual creature, Denham hauls Kong back to America and puts the beast on display. 

Things go a bit awry, however, when Kong breaks free of his chains and unleashes his anger on the unsuspecting citizens of New York.

Forget the fact that the movie has very little in the way of an actual story; King Kong is all about the spectacle, and, for audiences in 1933, it must have been a sight to behold. Aided by the stop-motion artistry of Willis O’Brien, Kong causes all sorts of chaos, both at home and abroad. While on the island, Kong does battle with a variety of creatures, including a Pteranodon and, most notably, a tyrannosaurus (an exciting showdown that ends with Kong breaking the prehistoric beast’s jaw). 

Yet this is nothing compared to what happens when the gargantuan ape hits the streets of New York, where he topples subway trains and scales the side of the Empire State Building. Chock full of memorable sequences, King Kong has earned its reputation as one of the most influential fantasy films ever made.

Yet another interesting aspect of King Kong is how Kong emerges as the most likable character in the entire movie. A freak of nature who fell in love with the wrong girl, Kong was torn from his natural habitat so that he could be put on public display, and though he was clearly intended to serve as the film’s monster, it’s hard to see him as anything more than an innocent victim. 

Ray Harryhausen himself once said, “(Willis) O’Brien injected into a pile of rubber and metal joints far more sympathy and depth than was to be found in the real people on the screen”, and after watching King Kong - whether for the first time or the hundredth - you’ll likely agree that Harryhausen's observation was 100% spot-on.







4 comments:

SpiderParker said...

Never Saw this version just the one in what I think was the late 70s with Kurt Russell....Wanted to know can we make requests for certain movies? I'm big on fantasy and I would love to see your review on certain Fantasy movies...such as Krull, The Sword and the Sorcerer, Conan the Barbarian, Dark City, The Time Machine the Original or new, or even the movie Time after Time with Jack the Ripper, Highlander, I
etc..I've got tons...:)

DVD Infatuation said...

@SpiderParker: Thanks for stopping by, and for the comment!

I'm always happy to take requests! Sometimes, it may take a while for me to get around to adding them to the blog, but I do try to watch movies that are recommended to me.

Of the ones you mentioned above, I've already reviewed both KRULL and DARK CITY, and will certainly be reviewing the others (I absolutely LOVE the original TIME MACHINE, and am a big fan of TIME AFTER TIME and the original CONAN THE BARBARIAN).

Please feel free to list as many fantasy films as you like. Again, I love receiving recommendations! I've discovered so many great movies thanks to the suggestions of others.

Thanks again for the comment!

Klaus said...

I never get tired of re-watching King Kong. One of my favourite films of all time.

I'd also recommend Merian C. Cooper's 1935 Fantasy adventure: "SHE"

James Robert Smith said...

This is perhaps the most perfect film ever made. It is, to my way of thinking, pretty much flawless. This is why no one has been able to effectively remake it or duplicate it in any way.