Rotten Tomatoes® Score
84%
50%
In Theaters: April 7, 1933
1h 40m | Horror, Thriller
How would you like to star opposite the tallest, darkest leading man in Hollywood? Enticed by these words, brunette leading lady Fay Wray dyed her hair blonde and accepted the role of Ann Darrow in King Kong -- and stayed with the project even after learning that her leading man was a 50-foot ape. The film introduces us to flamboyant, foolhardy documentary filmmaker Carl Denham (Robert Armstrong), who sails off to parts unknown to film his latest epic with leading lady Darrow in tow. Disembarking at Skull Island, they stumble on a ceremony in which the native dancers circle around a terrified-looking young girl, chanting, Kong! Kong! The chief (Noble Johnson) and witch doctor (Steve Clemente) spot Denham and company and order them to leave. But upon seeing Ann, the chief offers to buy the golden woman to serve as the bride of Kong. Denham refuses, and he and the others beat a hasty retreat to their ship. Late that night, a party of native warriors sneak on board the ship and kidnap Ann. They strap her to a huge sacrificial altar just outside the gate, then summon Kong, who winds up saving Ann instead of devouring her. Kong is eventually taken back to New York, where he breaks loose on the night of his Broadway premiere, thinking that his beloved Ann is being hurt by the reporters' flash bulbs. Now at large in New York, Kong searches high and low for Ann (in another long-censored scene, he plucks a woman from her high-rise apartment, then drops her to her death when he realizes she isn't the girl he's looking for). After proving his devotion by wrecking an elevated train, Kong winds up at the top of the Empire State Building, facing off against a fleet of World War I fighter planes.
Director: | Merian Cooper, Ernest Schoedsack |
Producer(s): | Dino De Laurentiis |
Cast: | Bruce Cabot, Fay Wray, Robert Armstrong, Frank Reicher, Sam Hardy, Noble Johnson, James Flavin, Steve Clemento, Walter Ackerman, Julius Harris, Jack O'Halloran |
Writer(s): | James Creelman, Ruth Rose |