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King Kong

  • 1933
  • Tous publics
  • 1h 40m
IMDb RATING
7.9/10
94K
YOUR RATING
Fay Wray and King Kong in King Kong (1933)
Trailer for the original, classic film
Play trailer1:32
1 Video
99+ Photos
Adventure EpicDinosaur AdventureJungle AdventureMonster HorrorUrban AdventureAdventureHorror

A film crew goes to a tropical island for a location shoot, where they capture a colossal ape who takes a shine to their blonde starlet, and bring him back to New York City.A film crew goes to a tropical island for a location shoot, where they capture a colossal ape who takes a shine to their blonde starlet, and bring him back to New York City.A film crew goes to a tropical island for a location shoot, where they capture a colossal ape who takes a shine to their blonde starlet, and bring him back to New York City.

  • Directors
    • Merian C. Cooper
    • Ernest B. Schoedsack
  • Writers
    • James Ashmore Creelman
    • Ruth Rose
    • Merian C. Cooper
  • Stars
    • Fay Wray
    • Robert Armstrong
    • Bruce Cabot
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.9/10
    94K
    YOUR RATING
    • Directors
      • Merian C. Cooper
      • Ernest B. Schoedsack
    • Writers
      • James Ashmore Creelman
      • Ruth Rose
      • Merian C. Cooper
    • Stars
      • Fay Wray
      • Robert Armstrong
      • Bruce Cabot
    • 613User reviews
    • 205Critic reviews
    • 92Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 4 wins & 8 nominations total

    Videos1

    King Kong
    Trailer 1:32
    King Kong

    Photos262

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    + 256
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    Top cast99+

    Edit
    Fay Wray
    Fay Wray
    • Ann Darrow
    Robert Armstrong
    Robert Armstrong
    • Carl Denham
    Bruce Cabot
    Bruce Cabot
    • Jack Driscoll
    Frank Reicher
    Frank Reicher
    • Capt. Englehorn
    Sam Hardy
    Sam Hardy
    • Charles Weston
    Noble Johnson
    Noble Johnson
    • Native Chief
    Steve Clemente
    Steve Clemente
    • Witch King
    • (as Steve Clemento)
    James Flavin
    James Flavin
    • Second Mate Briggs
    Walter Ackerman
    • Reporter
    • (uncredited)
    James Adamson
    • Native Child
    • (uncredited)
    Van Alder
    • Member of Ship's Crew
    • (uncredited)
    Ed Allen
    • Native
    • (uncredited)
    Etta Mae Allen
    • Native
    • (uncredited)
    Frank Angel
    • Reporter
    • (uncredited)
    Roscoe Ates
    Roscoe Ates
    • Press Photographer
    • (uncredited)
    Ralph Bard
    • Member of Ship's Crew
    • (uncredited)
    Reginald Barlow
    Reginald Barlow
    • Ship's Engineer
    • (uncredited)
    Leo Beard
    • Member of Ship's Crew
    • (uncredited)
    • Directors
      • Merian C. Cooper
      • Ernest B. Schoedsack
    • Writers
      • James Ashmore Creelman
      • Ruth Rose
      • Merian C. Cooper
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews613

    7.994K
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    Featured reviews

    10jon-larsen

    King Kong - One small step for man. One giant leap for film making!

    It's a shame that young people these days, don't know how to enjoy a black & white movie! I'm 14, and I love black & white movies. We saw this movie at school, and everyone hated it. They said it sucked, because it was in black & white, and the effects were hilariously bad!

    I disagreed!

    This movie is nearly 80 years old, and it's still a hit!

    The cinematography is incredibly beautiful. One of the greatest shots of all time is when Kong is on the top of the building!

    The acting is fine.

    The story is great, but my friends found it stupid. They thought it was unrealistic because there were dinosaurs and a giant gorilla on the island etc.

    This movie is entertaining throughout the whole movie! Most black & whites movies got a lot of dialog and long scenes with no editing, but not in this one! There are plenty of scenes in this movie where there are no dialog, but great editing and entertainment!

    The effects are so fantastic! Young people may find Kong hilarious when they see a close-up picture of him. But I was absolutely blown away! Imagine that you're in 1933. You go to the movies and you've never seen something like this before!

    King Kong is a one small step for man. One giant leap for film making!

    10/10
    8Markie_Mark99

    Excellent monster movie!

    I remember watching the 2005 King Kong movie in the theater and not thinking much of it because it wasn't anything too special. However, watching the original makes me appreciate the idea of King Kong. Not only were the effects revolutionary, but the story and characters to go along with it were stellar. It takes the classic idea of a misunderstood monster and puts a more emotional twist on it. You feel for both the damsel in distress and the monster alike.
    boris-26

    Some aspects of KING KONG people forget.

    First, the 1933 version of KING KONG, is for me, the greatest fantasy film ever made. Sure, there are fantasy films with far better special effects (THE MATRIX, JURASSIC PARK) better acting (the acting here is of the period!) but KING KONG is a film of tremendous excitement. The suspense, pacing, sensuality, violence all adds up to a blood pumping experience. We all read about the film's history, being made, released, censored, restored, and how it's been picked to itsy-bits by every arm-chair film "expert".

    What very few film-makers have focused on is the film-making itself in KING KONG. It has superb build-up. We are wondering what is on the island as we approach it. Then we wonder what is behind the wall on the island. Then we wonder what gigantic beast is sharing that frightening jungle with the rescuers, trying to save Fay Wray. The film is faultlessly edited. Many scenes begin or end with people running for their lives. Unneeded scenes just don't exsist (we go from Kong knocked out on Skull Island to his Broadway debut. We don't need to see what happens inbetween!) then there's Max Steiner's perfect music score. Before KONG, most music scores were borrowed snippets of classical or popular themes, but Steiner's score follows the action to an inch! Also, he does a great number of abstract musical strokes (I.e the clash of drums when Kong beats the giant snake to it's death. The lovely string piece that jumps to pulsating chase music in a milli-second.) When I hear of a friend say they never saw this film, it's like hearing a child say they never had ice cream. Long Live Kong!
    8Ben_Cheshire

    Tongue in cheek movie about Hollywood.

    "He was a king and a god in the world he knew, but now he comes to civilisation merely a captive, a show to gratify your curiosity," the director says to the vaudeville house, before a curtain goes up and we see Kong suspended with his arms nailed out, as if on a cross.

    Self-reflection and satire of Hollywood is everywhere, which came as a great shock to me. There is a great subtext: the story is about a filmmaker who travels to overseas locations, such as jungles, to film his movies - he cares nothing for the cultures he may be violating, all he cares is capturing the spectacle on film. If he is unable to capture it on film, he tells us early on in the picture, he'll destroy it without a second thought. This is a film about the emptiness and recklessness of Hollywood, yet the satire is not bitter, but tongue-in-cheek in a way that follows James Whale's advice for putting subtexts in genre films, ie, not spoiling it for those viewers who don't "get the joke." So Kong can be enjoyed as a pure genre picture. The performances have false moments, but as an adventure picture it develops well, taking us gradually further towards the mystery of the legend of Kong, then follows Kong as the whole drama of his attempted capture plays out. The music also, is great, and along with mist and good cinematography helps create a mysterious atmosphere. The beginning is fairly talky, but it picks up. And the lovely Fay Wray offers reason enough to watch this on her own. If I was Kong, i know i'd beat the hell out of any dinosaur there was in order to protect her!

    Luckily, King Kong came in the period between 1930 and 1934 when there was no production code in Hollywood, so content was not censored. A couple years later we wouldn't have had the pleasure of seeing Fay Wray clad in a torn to shreds jungle jane costume, and especially not then falling in the water wearing said outfit! And probably not the degree of violence we have here: in one particular fight Kong has with T-rex he breaks the dinosaur's head by pulling its jaws so far open!

    The vintage special effects are great. They're so fun for quaintness value, but in places they're actually really good. The wrestling match with the T-rex, when Kong cracks a giant snake's back, and especially when he shakes the men off the log - all these sequences in particular were very well done. When I think about it, these effects aren't as quaint next to today's as you might initially think. How would we do a convincing giant ape onscreen (how will Peter Jackson do it in 2005)? By computer? Most of our completely computerised creatures at this writing are ridiculously fake looking. Try the ridiculous creature in Hulk? Everyone commented on how fake it looked. I'll go for the much more fun stop-motion Hickenlooper Kong over Hulk anyday.

    And the famous climax in New York City, which ends on the Empire State Building with Kong swatting at planes, is marvellous.
    barnabyrudge

    They weren't just making a film when they made this one.... they were inventing rules and ideas that would be followed for decades to come.

    How many films can truly be said to be definitive? The answer is probably "not many", but the original 1933 version of King Kong is certainly one of them. For its time, every aspect is innovative. First-of-their-kind special effects, first-of-its-kind plot, famous performances and a final sequence that remains unequalled as an eye-popping cinematic experience. The quality of cinematography and visual trickery has progressed a long way since 1933 - so the special effects obviously look rather primitive to 21st Century eyes - but anyone with a shred of common sense will still be astounded by what they see. This is movie history in the making. Had this never been made, the whole history of films may have taken a different course.

    Ace film director Carl Denham (Robert Armstrong) hires an unemployed, attractive New York woman Ann Darrow (Fay Wray) to star in his new picture. He takes her by boat to remote Skull Island where, according to legend, there lives an awesome god-like beast named Kong. Denham's plan is to shoot a variation of the Beauty and the Beast story, using Ann as his beauty and Kong as his beast. Everyone involved gets more than they bargained for when Ann is kidnapped by the island natives and offered as a sacrifice to Kong. She is kidnapped by a gigantic prehistoric ape and saved only by the courage of ship's mate Jack Driscoll (Bruce Cabot). But Denham has one more trick up his sleeve when he captures Kong and takes the beast back to New York. You don't really think those chains will hold him, do you?

    Virtually every monster movie ever made owes something to King Kong - even colossal modern hits like Jurassic Park, The Lost World and Godzilla (not to mention thousands of small scale homages such as The Land Unknown and Gorgo). It is arguably the most influential film of all-time. I genuinely envy people who were lucky enough to experience this film during its 1933 opening week - what must they have thought? Did they realize they were witnessing something utterly extraordinary? I could go on all day giving reasons why you should see it, but it would be pointless. It can all be summed up in one sentence: if you have even the slightest interest in movies SEE THIS FILM!

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Merian C. Cooper's first vision for the film was of a giant ape on top of the world's tallest building, fighting airplanes. He worked backward from there to develop the rest of the story.
    • Goofs
      (at around 1h 14 mins) A Skull Island resident jumps from a hut and falls beside a domed chicken cage, which then hinges backwards and catches the actor's wig, taking it off his head, and remaining on top of the cage.
    • Quotes

      [last lines]

      Police Lieutenant: Well, Denham, the airplanes got him.

      Carl Denham: Oh no, it wasn't the airplanes. It was beauty killed the beast.

    • Crazy credits
      Opening Card: And the prophet said: "And lo, the beast looked upon the face of beauty. And it stayed its hand from killing. And from that day, it was as one dead." Old Arabian Proverb
    • Alternate versions
      On November 22, 2005, Turner Classic Movies premiered a version with a four minute overture added. This increased the run time to slightly over 104 minutes. This is also the U.S. two-disc DVD collector's edition version. Note, however, that the overture was not part of the film's original exhibition. According to John Morgan's notes on the score's re-construction, the overture was not written by Max Steiner. Morgan writes, "Another rumor has recently surfaced that Steiner composed an Overture for the film's world premiere opening in 1933 - there was even a recent recording claiming to be this long-lost Overture. Hearing the recorded "proof" of this Overture confirmed our suspicions: it was merely those same few acetates that have been floating around for years, professionally edited into a short Suite and called an Overture. In conversations I had with people who attended and remembered this opening, there was no music from the film used in any of these shows." Source: John Morgan, "Reconstruction Notes by John Morgan," Steiner: King Kong. Marco Polo (8.223763), 1997, pg. 21 (near bottom).
    • Connections
      Edited into Le vaisseau fantôme (1943)
    • Soundtracks
      St. Louis Blues
      (1914) (uncredited)

      Music by W.C. Handy

      Whistled by Robert Armstrong

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    FAQ

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    • Why did the natives build such a huge door if they wanted to keep Kong out?

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • September 29, 1933 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • King Kong, la huitième merveille du monde
    • Filming locations
      • San Pedro Harbor, Long Beach, California, USA
    • Production company
      • RKO Radio Pictures
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • $670,000 (estimated)
    • Gross worldwide
      • $1,181
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 40 minutes
    • Color
      • Black and White(original release)
      • Black and White

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