King Kong | |
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Directed by | Merian C. Cooper Ernest B. Schoedsack |
Produced by | Merian C. Cooper Ernest B. Schoedsack |
Written by | James Creelman Ruth Rose |
Starring | Robert Armstrong Bruce Cabot Fay Wray |
Music by | Max Steiner |
Cinematography | Eddie Linden Vernon Walker J.O. Taylor |
Editing by | Ted Chessman |
Production company | Radio Pictures |
Distributed by | Radio Pictures |
Release date(s) | March 2, 1933 |
Running time | 100 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Budget | $672,000 |
Gross revenue | $2.8 million |
Followed by | Son of Kong |
IMDb profile |
King Kong is a 1933 film (made prior to the establishment of the Hays Code in 1934) about a giant prehistoric gorilla, the movie's title character, that lives on Skull Island. The movie premiered on March 2, 1933 at two theatres in New York City, Radio City Music Hall and the RKO Roxy, followed by a Los Angeles premiere at Grauman's Chinese Theatre on March 23 and then a general release on April 10 of that year. It was one of the first notable movies to make use of stop-motion animation special effects, decades before the advent and use of CGI digital technology for movie and television special effects.
A group of explorers, led by filmmaker Carl Denham, and including actress Ann Darrow, travel to the island where Ann is captured by the natives and sacrificed to King Kong. The giant gorilla captures her and takes her back to his cave, but on the way there he fights and kills a Tyrannosaurus Rex (and breaks its jaw), a giant Elasmosaur and a Pteranodon when each prehistoric beast tried to attack Ann. Eventually her lover, Jack Driscoll (the ship's first mate) finds her and gets her back, but Kong follows and, after a rampage where he kills several of the natives, is knocked unconscious with gas grenades and captured. They take him to New York City and put him on public display at a large theatre, but when he is startled by the flash-bulbs of the reporters trying to get a picture of Ann, he goes berserk, escapes from the theatre and goes on a rampage in the streets, killing several people. After mistaking another woman for Ann and then dropping her to her death in the street below, Kong captures Ann at a hotel, then destroys an elevated train and kills many of its passengers before he takes her to the top of the Empire State Building, where he is gunned down by biplanes and falls to his death.
Categories: [Science Fiction] [Fictional Characters]