King Kong | Giant Ape, Stop-Motion Animation, Adventure | Britannica (2024)

film by Cooper and Schoedsack [1933]

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Lee Pfeiffer Author/co-author of numerous books about the cinema and is regarded as one of the foremost James Bond scholars. His book The Essential Bond: An Authorized Guide to the World of 007 (written with...

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King Kong, landmark American monster film, released in 1933, that was noted for its pioneering special effects by Willis O’Brien. It was the first significant feature film to star an animated character and also made actress Fay Wray an international star.

Director Carl Denham (played by Robert Armstrong) leads a film crew to a remote, uncharted Pacific island in search of the legendary Kong, a gigantic ape. After the island’s inhabitants abandon actress Ann Darrow (Wray) to Kong, Denham and his crew pursue the beast through the dinosaur-infested jungle. They eventually capture Kong and take him to New York as a sideshow attraction, with disastrous results. The climax of the film, when Kong climbs the Empire State Building while clutching a terrified Ann, is one of the most famous in film history. Kong safely places Ann aside and then battles machine-gun fire from swarming planes, which mortally wound him and cause him to plunge to his death. Denham then utters the film’s signature lines: “Oh, no. It wasn’t the airplanes. It was beauty killed the beast.”

Despite the perception of Kong as a giant ferocious beast, the “Eighth Wonder of the World,” as he was billed in the script and in publicity material for the film, he was in fact an 18-inch (45-cm) puppet designed by O’Brien. For close-up shots, the special-effects team built giant arms, hands, and feet for Kong, and men inside a giant model head of the ape operated cables and levers to simulate facial features. O’Brien’s pioneering use of models and miniatures, stop-motion animation, miniature rear projection, and traveling mattes (which combined images of foreground action with a separately filmed background) became the basic techniques of movie special effects.

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Until her death in 2004, Wray enjoyed an iconic status in Hollywood based solely upon her role in this film. Max Steiner’s triumphant musical score inspired a generation of film composers. King Kong was remade in 1976 with Jeff Bridges and Jessica Lange and in 2005 by director Peter Jackson.

Production notes and credits

  • Studio: RKO Radio Pictures

  • Directors and producers: Merian C. Cooper and Ernest B. Schoedsack

  • Writers: James Creelman and Ruth Rose

  • Music: Max Steiner

  • Running time: 104 minutes

Cast

  • Fay Wray (Ann Darrow)

  • Robert Armstrong (Carl Denham)

  • Bruce Cabot (Jack Driscoll)

  • Frank Reicher (Captain Englehorn)

  • Sam Hardy (Charles Weston)

Lee Pfeiffer
King Kong | Giant Ape, Stop-Motion Animation, Adventure | Britannica (2024)
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