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King Kong (2005)


Directed by: Peter Jackson
Starring: Naomi Watts
Genre:
Sci-Fi/Fantasy
Run Time: 187
min.
Release Date:
December 2005
On The Web:
Official
Site
Teaser:
Movie Trailer
Reviewed by
Byron Merritt |
It’s been 72 years since audiences were
graced with Merian C. Cooper's
epic KING KONG film, a movie that stunned
and amazed. Never before seen special effects and a great story greeted
those who bustled into theaters in 1933. And now, in 2005, Peter Jackson
(director of the excellent
LORD OF THE RINGS
trilogy) takes on the task of reintroducing movie-goers with this
legendary tale.
If you’ve been sleeping under a rock for the past 72-plus years, let me
enlighten you: King Kong is a massive ape (about the size of a T-Rex
Dinosaur) that lives on the fictitious Skull Island. Carl Denham (Robert
Armstrong), a filmmaker, is desperate
to find the island and shoot a new film starring actress Ann Darrow (Fay
Wray). But once they find the island, a
group of nasty natives captures Miss Darrow and "present" her to King
Kong as a gift. A race to save Ann Darrow ensues and, on top of that, to
capture and bring Kong back to New York City to show off as the 8th
Wonder of the World.
Once captured and returned to NYC, all goes horribly wrong as Kong
escapes, recaptures Miss Darrow, climbs to the top of the Empire State
Building, and is shot to death by Army Air Corp planes.
The thing that made the 1933 Kong so
interesting was the relationship between Kong and Miss Darrow’s
character. And Peter Jackson uses that to full advantage here, going
even further in his telling of that unusual relationship by having Ann
Darrow (now played by Naomi Watts,
THE PAINTED VEIL) actually care for
Kong as much as he cares for her. That’s not to say this is about some
twisted relationship between simian and human, but the emotions they
feel for one another are easily palpable throughout the movie. This is
the biggest strength of the film and one of Mr. Jackson’s fortes (watch
The Lord of the Rings if you doubt it).
And speaking of The Lord of the Rings, that film was Peter Jackson’s
crowning achievement. The care and meticulous nature with which he put
those movies together are easily seen. But here, that meticulousness got
a bit lost...
Problems:
#1. The relationship between two of the shipmates (a mentor/student
type) is given lots of screen time and then summarily dropped without
explanation as to why the relationship was started in the first place.
#2. Jack Black (THE
HOLIDAY) picks up the roll as
filmmaker Carl Denham and does so only moderately well. Part of the
problem was the scripting of his character. He’s not a very nice man,
will do anything (even risk the lives of everyone and everything) to get
what he wants, and says the hollow "It was beauty that killed the beast"
line at the end of the film (which rang completely false considering how
Kong came to be in New York in this version).
#3. When the ship carrying all of the prime characters becomes lost, the
captain asks one of his crew to take the sextant
out and spot some stars. Umm, sextants were used to measure the movement
of the sun across the horizon, not stars.
#4. The film was just too long. My butt began to ache from sitting in a
theater for three hours. Cutting length really was needed. But I think
Mr. Jackson is a bit spoiled on this issue thanks to the success of his
The Lord of the Rings trilogies.
#5. The cutesy ice-rink scene (barf!).
Although these problems plagued the film, there was some stunning CGI
work that actually made me dizzy. Specifically, the airplane scenes as
they shot at Kong on top of the building. The circling and diving of the
planes was amazing. Kong’s presence was also completely believable
although we all know it’s a CGI creation. But he was so lifelike that it
took absolutely no effort on my part to suspend disbelief.
And that’s about it for one of this year’s blockbuster films. A good
film, but one that needed a bit more detailed care by someone as sharp
as Mr. Jackson.
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Image from King Kong

DVD cost: $28.99
Purchase:
BestPrices.com
Film Review Stew
Favorite? No.
Stew Poo-Poo? No.
Newsworthy: Peter Jackson
was paid $20 million to direct this film, the highest salary ever paid
to a film director in advance of production.
Movie Quote: "You
saw something. What took her, Denham?"
Other Actors/Actresses
from King Kong
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