| King Kong |
| Movie Reviews | ||||||||||||
| Written by Sham | ||||||||||||
| Thursday, 15 December 2005 17:40 | ||||||||||||
King Kong Collector's Edition DVD Review
Written by Sham
DVD released by Warner Home Video
Directed by Merian C. Cooper & Ernest B. Schoedsack Written by James Ashmore Creelman & Ruth Rose,based on an idea by Edgar Wallace and Merian C. Cooper 1933, Region 1 (NTSC), 104 minutes, Not rated DVD released on November 22nd, 2005
Starring: Fay Wray as Ann Darrow Robert Armstrong as Carl Denham Bruce Cabot as John “Jack” Driscoll Frank Reicher as Capt. Englehorn Sam Hardy as Charles Weston Noble Johnson as Native Chief Victor Wong as Charlie
Review:
“...one of the strongest motives that lead men to art and science is escape from everyday life with its painful crudity and hopeless dreariness, from the fetters of one's own ever-shifting desires. A finely tempered nature longs to escape from the personal life into the world of objective perception and thought.”
- Albert Einstein, theoretical physicist
Welcome to the movies.
King Kong is the greatest black and white film in the history of the cinema, and a sure candidate for the best movie ever made. It is a film that has become so mainstream, it has spawned countless imitations, many direct and indirect sequels, and even two remakes, one of which premiers on December 14 from acclaimed movie director Peter Jackson (The Lord of the Rings trilogy).
And yet, with such an extensive list of films creditably influenced by Kong’s success, none have yet to display the horror, sentiment, and fantasy that made the 1933 film such a stunning achievement. (We’ll all have to wait and see how the latest remake compares).
Seventy-two years have passed since Cooper and Schoedsack’s King Kong debuted in theaters, and this was in a time when society still suffered from the Stock Market Crash and the Depression that resulted from it. Mind you, this was an era of complete desolation, when money was insufficient and jobs were meager. The entertainment industry (“talkies” of the late ’20s and early ’30s) suffered from the crisis as well. Movies weren’t making profit, and business far from flourished. Interest in movies, however, forever escalated. The general public, whether they had the money or not, desired to see these “talkies.”
King Kong was one of the first of the new generation of filmmaking. It began production only five years after the presumably first of the talkies, The Jazz Singer, directed by Alan Crosland in 1927, and popular for actor Al Jolson’s line “Wait a minute, wait a minute. You ain’t heard nothin’ yet.”
And audiences didn’t hear or see anything compared to what Kong accomplished. It required the use of large-scale creatures to hiss and roar, prey and attack, and live like actual characters, something audiences hadn’t experienced many times before, and not at all with sound. In a way, Kong would be known today as the Hollywood blockbuster. It’s a rip-roaring action adventure film with ancient monsters and inspired fantasy.
The plot was original for its time, and it still works marvelously today. Carl Denham (Robert Armstrong – The Most Dangerous Game) is a passionate filmmaker looking for a leading lady for his next motion picture. He finds this lady in a woman named Ann Darrow (Fay Wray – Mystery of the Wax Museum), who’s dazzling good looks and ear-piercing scream are perfect for the role.
With his cast and crew, he voyages to Skull Island and disrupts a ceremony of the island’s natives. These inhabitants take an extreme interest in Ann and offer six of their women in place of her. (This is a highly controversial sequence which many argue hints at an age of racial bigotry.) Of course, the filmmakers decline their proposal, but the natives take Ann anyway without consent or remorse. The filmmakers, discovering the kidnapping, come to realize that Ann is a bridal sacrifice, but not for the tribe – for the God of the island himself.
The giant ape. The legend. Kong.
The characters must endure many obstacles to save Ann as they fight prehistoric dinosaurs, oversized insects, and the maniacal giant gorilla himself. But is Kong really a menace, or an empathetic and misunderstood animal of the wild acting on natural impulse?
Special effects creator Willis O’Brien should leave you without any questions on the matter. His influential stop-motion animation is dated by the CGI standards of today, but they’re also extremely effective. O’Brien’s eighteen inch robotic Kong is an outstanding effect, whose facial features do a tremendous amount of work in setting up the film’s evocative and powerful climax. O’Brien isn’t the only genius here, though, as Max Steiner contributes to the movie’s impact by giving it a great score. When was the last time you saw a movie with a four minute overture in the beginning? King Kong’s score starts off sophisticated, builds to heart-racing, and concludes in melancholy, playing like a Greek tragedy by Sophocles or Euripides.
Actors turn in classy performances. Lines are delivered sincerely and promptly like most movies of the era. However, Fay Wray is excellent as Ann Darrow. One of the single best scenes in King Kong is when Carl Denham, played very hastily by Robert Armstrong, is directing Ann aboard his ship. He tells her to look upon something mysterious and horrible, and when he instructs her to “scream for her life,” she does – and your heart sinks and your face melts just as much as hers and every supporting actor on screen with her. Wray is a striking actress with physical onscreen dominance and vocal authority, and her performance here is — and will always be — known as the best she’s ever done. Wray passed away last year from natural causes, but her character, Ann, will long be remembered, much like the movie itself, and great movies in general.
Films, when done right, are immortal. They may sink into the shadows from time to time as other films obtain the focus of the movie going world, but they are not perpetually forgotten or disregarded. King Kong is such a film. “The Eighth Wonder of the World” rumbles out of the shadows and back into its rightful place in the spotlight with this 2-disc Collector’s Edition DVD.
Video and Audio: |
Grades:
| |
| Movie: | – One of the greatest movies in film history. An absolute blast. |
| Video: | – The picture is impressive with the cleanup of many artifacts and scratches. |
| Audio: | – A very clean presentation; the best audio track to date. |
| Features: | – An excellent and packed collection of bonus material. . |
| Overall: | – One of the cinema’s very best films on one of the year’s best DVD’s. |

Conclusion:
No film has ever had as much of an influence on the future of movies, and no film has matched the artistry and talent that made King Kong such an extraordinary masterpiece.
This is the ultimate movie in the ultimate DVD package — a collector’s dream come true.

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– One of the greatest movies in film history. An absolute blast.

