King KongReleased: April 7, 1933 Studio: RKO Genre: monster/romance Box Office (numbers in millions): Domestic: 10.0 Worldwide: -- Adjusted for Inflation: Domestic: -- Worldwide: -- |
Directing: Merian C. Cooper, Ernest B. Schoedsack Screenwriting: James Ashmore Creelman, Ruth Rose Starring: Fay Wray, Robert Armstrong, Bruce Cabot, Frank Reicher Review:This “classic horror-fantasy thriller” FS is “one of the masterpieces of cinema.” FS Willis O’Brien’s ““ground-breaking technical effects (stop-motion animation)” FS “of monster ape Kong [are] still unsurpassed,” LM “an emotional and special-effects marvel.” RS The movie tells the story of filmmaker Denham (Armstrong) and his plan to shoot a jungle movie starring “a lovely, nubile starlet (Wray)” FS and fortune-hunters “in search of the fabled giant ape, the magnificent, exotic, and dangerous ‘King Kong.’” FS They “travel to remote, fog-shrouded Skull Island…a prehistoric world populated by dinosaurs and giant snakes.” FS In addition to an adventure story, this is “a beauty-and-the-beast drama.” FS Wray is used to lure and capture the fifty-foot gorilla and then “Denham brings him back to New York City as a sideshow attraction.” FS However, Kong “escapes and goes on a rampage, ransacking the city in search of the young actress.” FS The “final sequence atop Empire State Building is now cinema folklore,” LM “but it wasn’t the airplanes that killed the mighty Kong – ‘It was beauty killed the beast.’” A07 The movie “accomplishes the astounding feat of making a horny male (i.e. Kong) who lusts after a blonde bimbo half his age seem sympathetic, tragic and downright endearing.” ML “Kong is the definitive wronged male of the cinema century.” RS The movie was remade in 1976 and again in 2005. Sources:
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