Movie Man
When film critic Will Pfeifer isn’t watching movies, he’s reading about movies, talking about movies, thinking about movies or dreaming about movies. Now he shares that unhealthy obsession with you. From Hollywood hits to Japanese obscurities, from Oscar night to the summer season, he’s got movies on the brain — and on this blog.

Happy birthday, ya big ape!

March 3rd, 2008 at 12:02pm Will Pfeifer

kong.jpg

KING KONG (the original, not Peter Jackson’s 2005 version or that godawful seventies remake) premiered 75 years ago yesterday in New York. (I realize I’m a day late with these birthday greetings, but he’s a gorilla — is he really going to mind?) It was a huge hit in every sense of the world, blowing the minds of Depression-era audiences, single-handedly rescuing RKO Studios from Depression-era woes and changing the art of special effects — and cinema in general — for ever.

If you have Turner Classic Movies, you can catch if April 7. Or, if you have a DVD player (and I’m guessing you do), you can watch the excellent Warner Bros. disc that came out a few years ago. Remastered and restored, it comes paired with all sorts of behind-the-scenes material that reveals just how hard it was turning an 18-inch model into a giant rampaging gorilla — and a gorilla with personality, too.

If you’ve never seen it, I highly recommend giving it a look. The beginning drags a bit, but once the islanders kidnap Fay Wray, it’s nothing but dinosaurs, giant apes, World War II biplanes and just-finished skyscapers ’til the famous final line, “It was beauty killed the beast.”

Entry Filed under: Classic movies

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