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King Kong

King Kong

  • Status: Released
  • 15-03-1933
  • Runtime: 104 min
  • Score: 7.6
  • Vote count: 1528

Adventurous filmmaker Carl Denham sets out to produce a motion picture unlike anything the world has seen before. Alongside his leading lady Ann Darrow and his first mate Jack Driscoll, they arrive on an island and discover a legendary creature said to be neither beast nor man. Denham captures the monster to be displayed on Broadway as King Kong, the eighth wonder of the world.

Robert Armstrong

Carl Denham

Fay Wray

Ann Darrow

Bruce Cabot

Jack Driscoll

Frank Reicher

Captain Englehorn

Victor Wong

Ship's Cook Charlie

James Flavin

Mate Briggs

Sam Hardy

Charles Weston

Noble Johnson

Skull Island Native Chief

Steve Clemente

Skull Island Witch Doctor

Roscoe Ates

Press Photographer (uncredited)

Merian C. Cooper

Pilot of Plane that Kills Kong (uncredited)

Frances Curry

Intended Sacrificial Bride for Kong (uncredited)

Paul Porcasi

Apple Vendor (uncredited)

Ernest B. Schoedsack

Machine-Gunner on Plane that Kills Kong (uncredited)

Harry Strang

Policeman at Headquarters (uncredited)

Bill Williams

Theatre Usher (uncredited)

Dick Curtis

Member of Ship's Crew (uncredited)

Reginald Barlow

Ship's Engineer (uncredited)

Roy Brent

Member of Ship's Crew (uncredited)

Edward Clark

Member of Ship's Crew (uncredited)

Harry Cornbleth

Member of Ship's Crew (uncredited)

James Dime

Member of Ship's Crew (uncredited)

Charlie Hall

Member of Ship's Crew (uncredited)

Allen Jenkins

Member of Ship's Crew (uncredited)

George Magrill

Member of Ship's Crew (uncredited)

John Northpole

Member of Ship's Crew (uncredited)

Gil Perkins

Member of Ship's Crew (uncredited)

Jack Perry

Member of Ship's Crew (uncredited)

Harry Tenbrook

Member of Ship's Crew (uncredited)

Sailor Vincent

Member of Ship's Crew (uncredited)

Blackie Whiteford

Member of Ship's Crew (uncredited)

Dorothy Gulliver

New York Theatergoer

Carlotta Monti

New York Theatergoer

Sandra Shaw

Woman Who Screams From Hotel Window

Louise Emmons

Old Woman in Line at Mission

Everett Brown

Native in Ape Costume

Onest Conley

Warrior (uncredited)

Odel Conley

Warrior (uncredited)

Madame Sul-Te-Wan

Native Handmaiden (uncredited)

Jim Thorpe

Native Dancer (uncredited)

tmdb27219454

In watching this movie, and I'm talking about actually scrutinizing it intently, I was shocked at the amount and the extremity of the violence that was in the picture. Natives were being bitten, swallowed and purposely stepped upon by Kong. The sailors were chased, trampled and eaten by the dinosaurs and then we have all the New York City violence on top of it all where Kong tosses a woman to her death and bites on a bystander. Also, for it being an 85+ year old movie, the special effects STILL stand up rather well and STILL look convincingly realistic. In fact, I believe these FX are of a better quality than the 1976 remake and even comes close to the 2005 CGI version. If you've never seen this classic, mostly because "who would want to watch that old-style claymation" or you can't watch anything not "in Living Color," you really need to give this one a try. For those of you that have seen it, let me urge you to rewatch it, possibly with some newly-opened eyes.

CinemaSerf

Shown recently by the BBC and wow, how fantastically this has stood the test of time. I can see why there have been so many remakes of this iconic tale of ambition, power and true love but none that shine a candle to this - even after over 80 years. Robert Armstrong and Fay Wray do their bit as the producer and the starlet, but the true stars are lighting, photography and special effects which are masterful as we visit this ancient island divided by a great wall (how on earth did the natives ever manage to build it?) that keeps the prehistoric monsters at bay. This is adventure cinema at it's absolute best; and even the writing is reasonable. If you don't feel sympathy for Kong at the end then where is your heart?

GenerationofSwine

So this is the bar, and this is the reason that people don't like any of the remakes... except the 2005 remake, people don't like that because it stinks. But this shot for the moon. It promised the audience a giant ape, it gave the audience a giant ape... and a sort of love story that was really cute and relatable that brought it all together. It reached for the stars visually, it grabbed one, and it told an amazing story along with it. It was a win on every front. So, now, when people watch King Kong remakes, they look at them and they don't live up to the effort that this movie put into itself. They all look better, but they don't feel as well crafted as the original, because they aren't. They are all a little lazy in comparison because it's easier to do it now. In 11 years its going to be 100 years old and people are still going to marvel at the work put into it.