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King Kong

King Kong is a fictional giant monster resembling a gorilla, who has appeared in various media since 1933. He has been dubbed The Eighth Wonder of the World, a phrase commonly used within the franchise. His first appearance was in the novelization of the 1933 film King Kong from RKO Pictures, with the film premiering a little over two months later. Upon its initial release and subsequent re-releases, the film received universal acclaim. A sequel quickly followed that same year with The Son of Kong, featuring Little Kong. Toho produced King Kong vs. Godzilla (1962) featuring a giant Kong battling Toho's Godzilla and King Kong Escapes (1967), a film loosely based on Rankin/Bass' The King Kong Show (1966-1969). In 1976, Dino De Laurentiis produced a modern remake of the original film directed by John Guillermin. A sequel, King Kong Lives, followed a decade later featuring a Lady Kong. Another remake of the original, this time set in 1933, was released in 2005 by filmmaker Peter Jackson.

King Kong
King Kong franchise character
King Kong as featured in promotional material for the original 1933 film
First appearanceKing Kong (1933)
Created byEdgar Wallace
Merian C. Cooper
Portrayed by
Voiced by
Binomial nomenclature
  • Megaprimatus Kong (2005)
  • Gorilla gigans (Kong Reborn)
  • Titanus Kong (MonsterVerse)
In-universe information
Full nameKong
AliasesThe Eighth Wonder of the World
SpeciesGiant gorilla-like ape
Family
  • Little Kong (1933)
  • Lady Kong (1986)
  • Baby Kong (1986)
  • Deceased parents (MonsterVerse)
Home

Kong: Skull Island (2017), set in 1973, is part of Legendary Entertainment's MonsterVerse, which began with Legendary's reboot of Godzilla in 2014. A sequel, Godzilla vs. Kong, once again pitting the characters against one another, was released in March 2021.

The character of King Kong has become one of the world's most famous movie icons, having inspired a number of sequels, remakes, spin-offs, imitators, parodies, cartoons, books, comics, video games, theme park rides, and a stage play.[15] King Kong has also crossed over into other franchises such as Planet of the Apes,[16] and encountered characters from other franchises in crossover media, such as the Toho movie monster Godzilla, as well as pulp characters Doc Savage and Tarzan. His role in the different narratives varies, ranging from a rampaging monster to a tragic antihero.

Overview

 
King Kong graphics at Empire State Building.

The King Kong character was conceived and created by American filmmaker Merian C. Cooper. In the original film, the character's name is Kong, a name given to him by the inhabitants of the fictional "Skull Island" in the Indian Ocean, where Kong lives along with other oversized animals, such as plesiosaurs, pterosaurs and various dinosaurs. An American film crew, led by Carl Denham, captures Kong and takes him to New York City to be exhibited as the "Eighth Wonder of the World".

Kong escapes and climbs the Empire State Building, only to fall from the skyscraper after being attacked by biplanes with guns. Denham comments "it wasn't the aeroplanes, It was beauty killed the beast", for he climbs the building in the first place only in an attempt to protect Ann Darrow, an actress originally kidnapped by the natives of the island and offered up to Kong as a sacrifice (in the 1976 remake, her character is named "Dwan").

A pseudo-documentary about Skull Island that appears on the DVD for the 2005 remake (originally seen on the Sci-Fi Channel at the time of its theatrical release) gives Kong's scientific name as Megaprimatus kong[17] ("Megaprimatus", deriving from the prefix "mega-" and the Latin words "primate" and "primatus", means "big primate" or "big supreme being") and states that his species may be related to Gigantopithecus, though that genus of giant ape is more closely related to orangutans than to gorillas.

Conception and creation

 
Merian C. Cooper glances up at his creation.

Merian C. Cooper became fascinated by gorillas at the age of 6.[18] In 1899, he was given a book from his uncle called Explorations and Adventures in Equatorial Africa.[19] The book (written in 1861), chronicled the adventures of Paul Du Chaillu in Africa and his various encounters with the natives and wildlife there.[20] Cooper became fascinated with the stories involving the gorillas, in particular, Du Chaillu's depiction of a particular gorilla known for its "extraordinary size",[21] that the natives described as "invincible" and the "King of the African Forest".[22] When Du Chaillu and some natives encountered a gorilla later in the book he described it as a "hellish dream creature" that was "half man, half beast".[23]

As an adult, Cooper became involved in the motion picture industry. While filming The Four Feathers in Africa, he came into contact with a family of baboons.[24] This gave him the idea to make a picture about primates.[25] A year later when he got to RKO, Cooper wanted to film a "terror gorilla picture". As the story was being fleshed out, Cooper decided to make his gorilla giant sized. Cooper stated that the idea of Kong fighting warplanes on top of a building came from him seeing a plane flying over the New York Insurance Building, then the tallest building in the world.[26] He came up with the ending before the rest of the story as he stated, "Without any conscious effort of thought I immediately saw in my mind's eye a giant gorilla on top of the building".[27] Cooper also was influenced by Douglas Burden's accounts of the Komodo dragon,[28] and wanted to pit his terror gorilla against dinosaur-sized versions of these reptiles, stating to Burden, "I also had firmly in mind to giantize both the gorilla and your dragons to make them really huge. However I always believed in personalizing and focusing attention on one main character and from the very beginning I intended to make it the gigantic gorilla, no matter what else I surrounded him with".[28] Around this time, Cooper began to refer to his project as a "giant terror gorilla picture" featuring "a gigantic semi-humanoid gorilla pitted against modern civilization".[29]

When designing King Kong, Cooper wanted him to be a nightmarish gorilla monster. As he described Kong in a 1930 memo, "His hands and feet have the size and strength of steam shovels; his girth is that of a steam boiler. This is a monster with the strength of a hundred men. But more terrifying is the head—a nightmare head with bloodshot eyes and jagged teeth set under a thick mat of hair, a face half-beast half-human".[30] Willis O'Brien created an oil painting depicting the giant gorilla menacing a jungle heroine and hunter for Cooper.[31][32] However, when it came time for O'Brien and Marcel Delgado to sculpt the animation model, Cooper decided to backpedal on the half-human look for the creature and became adamant that Kong be a gorilla. O'Brien on the other hand, wanted him to be almost human-like to gain audience empathy, and told Delgado to "make that ape almost human".[33] Cooper laughed at the end result, saying that it looked like a cross between a monkey and a man with very long hair.[33] For the second model, O'Brien again asked Delgado to add human features but to tone it down somewhat. The end result (which was rejected) was described as looking like a missing link.[33] Disappointed, Cooper stated, "I want Kong to be the fiercest, most brutal, monstrous damned thing that has ever been seen!"[33] On December 22, 1931, Cooper got the dimensions of a bull gorilla from the American Museum of Natural History telling O'Brien, "Now that's what I want!"[33] When the final model was created, it had the basic look of a gorilla but managed to retain some human-like qualities. For example, Delgado streamlined the body by removing the distinctive paunch and rump of a gorilla.[34] O'Brien would incorporate some characteristics and nuances of an earlier creature he had created in 1915 for the silent short The Dinosaur and the Missing Link into the general look and personality of Kong, even going as far as to refer to the creature as "Kong's ancestor".[35][36] When it came time to film, Cooper agreed that Kong should walk upright at times (mostly in the New York sequences) in order to appear more intimidating.[37]

Etymology

Merian C. Cooper said he was very fond of strong, hard-sounding words that started with the letter "K". Some of his favorite words were "Komodo", "Kodiak" and "Kodak".[38] When Cooper was envisioning his giant terror gorilla idea, he wanted to capture a real gorilla from the Congo and have it fight a real Komodo dragon on Komodo Island (this scenario would eventually evolve into Kong's battle with the tyrannosaur on Skull Island when the film was produced a few years later at RKO). Cooper's friend Douglas Burden's trip to the island of Komodo and his encounter with the Komodo dragons was a big influence on the Kong story.[39] Cooper was fascinated by Burden's adventures as chronicled in his book Dragon Lizards of Komodo where he referred to the animal as the "King of Komodo".[38] It was this phrase along with "Komodo" and "Kongo" [sic] (and his overall love for hard sounding "K"-words)[40] that gave him the idea to name the giant ape "Kong". He loved the name, as it had a "mystery sound" to it.

After Cooper got to RKO, British mystery writer Edgar Wallace was contracted to write the first draft of the screen story. It was simply referred to as "The Beast". RKO executives were unimpressed with the bland title. David O. Selznick suggested Jungle Beast as the film's new title,[41] but Cooper was unimpressed and wanted to name the film after the main character. He stated he liked the "mystery word" aspect of Kong's name and that the film should carry "the name of the leading mysterious, romantic, savage creature of the story" such as with Dracula and Frankenstein.[41] RKO sent a memo to Cooper suggesting the titles Kong: King of Beasts, Kong: The Jungle King, and Kong: The Jungle Beast, which combined his and Selznick's proposed titles.[41] As time went on, Cooper would eventually name the story simply Kong while Ruth Rose was writing the final version of the screenplay. Because David O. Selznick thought that audiences would think that the film, with the one word title of Kong, would be mistaken as a docudrama like Grass and Chang, which were one-word titled films that Cooper had earlier produced, he added the "King" to Kong's name in order to differentiate it.[42]

Appearances and abilities

In his first appearance in King Kong (1933), Kong was a gigantic prehistoric ape.[43] While gorilla-like in appearance, he had a vaguely humanoid look and at times walked upright in an anthropomorphic manner.[37]

Like most simians, Kong possesses semi-human intelligence and great physical strength. Kong's size changes drastically throughout the course of the film. While creator Merian C. Cooper envisioned Kong as being "40 to 50 feet tall",[44] animator Willis O'Brien and his crew built the models and sets scaling Kong to be only 18 feet (5.5 m) tall on Skull Island, and rescaled to be 24 feet (7.3 m) tall in New York.[45]

This did not stop Cooper from playing around with Kong's size as he directed the special effect sequences; by manipulating the sizes of the miniatures and the camera angles, he made Kong appear a lot larger than O'Brien wanted, even as large as 60 feet (18.3 m) in some scenes.

As Cooper stated in an interview:

I was a great believer in constantly changing Kong's height to fit the settings and the illusions. He's different in almost every shot; sometimes he's only 18 feet tall and sometimes 60 feet or larger. This broke every rule that O'Bie and his animators had ever worked with, but I felt confident that if the scenes moved with excitement and beauty, the audience would accept any height that fitted into the scene. For example, if Kong had only been 18 feet high on the top of the Empire State Building, he would have been lost, like a little bug; I constantly juggled the heights of trees and dozens of other things. The one essential thing was to make the audience enthralled with the character of Kong so that they wouldn't notice or care that he was 18 feet high or 40 feet, just as long as he fitted the mystery and excitement of the scenes and action.[46]

Concurrently, the Kong bust made for the film was built in scale with a 40-foot (12.2 m) ape,[47] while the full sized hand of Kong was built in scale with a 70-foot (21.3 m) ape.[48] Meanwhile, RKO's promotional materials listed Kong's official height as 50 feet (15.2 m).[43]

In the 1960s, Toho Studios from Japan licensed the character for the films King Kong vs. Godzilla and King Kong Escapes. For more details on these versions of the character, see below.

In 1975, Italian producer Dino De Laurentiis paid RKO for the remake rights to King Kong. This resulted in King Kong (1976). This Kong was an upright walking anthropomorphic ape, appearing even more human-like than the original. Also like the original, this Kong had semi-human intelligence and vast strength. In the 1976 film, Kong was scaled to be 42 feet (12.8 m) tall on Skull island and rescaled to be 55 feet (16.8 m) tall in New York.[49] Ten years later, Dino De Laurentiis got the approval from Universal to do a sequel called King Kong Lives. This Kong had more or less the same appearance and abilities, but tended to walk on his knuckles more often and was enlarged, scaled to 60 feet (18.3 m).[50]

Universal Studios had planned to do a King Kong remake as far back as 1976. They finally followed through almost 30 years later, with a three-hour film directed by Peter Jackson. Jackson opted to make Kong a gigantic silverback gorilla without any anthropomorphic features. This Kong looked and behaved more like a real gorilla: he had a large herbivore's belly, walked on his knuckles without any upright posture, and even beat his chest with his palms as opposed to clenched fists. In order to ground his Kong in realism, Jackson and the Weta Digital crew gave a name to his fictitious species Megaprimatus kong and suggested it to have evolved from the Gigantopithecus. Kong was the last of his kind. He was portrayed in the film as being quite old, with graying fur and battle-worn with scars, wounds, and a crooked jaw from his many fights against rival creatures. He is the dominant being on the island, the king of his world. But, like his film predecessors, he possesses considerable intelligence and great physical strength; he also appears far more nimble and agile. This Kong was scaled to a consistent height of 25 feet (7.6 m) tall on both Skull Island and in New York.[51] Jackson describes his central character:

We assumed that Kong is the last surviving member of his species. He had a mother and a father and maybe brothers and sisters, but they're dead. He's the last of the huge gorillas that live on Skull Island ... when he goes ... there will be no more. He's a very lonely creature, absolutely solitary. It must be one of the loneliest existences you could ever possibly imagine. Every day, he has to battle for his survival against very formidable dinosaurs on the island, and it's not easy for him. He's carrying the scars of many former encounters with dinosaurs. I'm imagining he's probably 100 to 120 years old by the time our story begins. And he has never felt a single bit of empathy for another living creature in his long life; it has been a brutal life that he's lived.[52]

In the 2017 film Kong: Skull Island, Kong is scaled to be 104 feet (31.7 m) tall,[53] making it the second largest and largest American incarnation in the series until the 2021 film Godzilla vs. Kong, in which he became the largest incarnation in the series, standing at 337 feet (102.7 m).[54] Director Jordan Vogt-Roberts stated in regard to Kong's immense stature:

The thing that most interested me was, how big do you need to make [Kong], so that when someone lands on this island and doesn't believe in the idea of myth, the idea of wonder – when we live in a world of social and civil unrest, and everything is crumbling around us, and technology and facts are taking over – how big does this creature need to be, so that when you stand on the ground and you look up at it, the only thing that can go through your mind is: "That's a god!"[55]

He also stated that the original 1933 look was the inspiration for the design, saying:

We sort of went back to the 1933 version in the sense that he's a bipedal creature that walks in an upright position, as opposed to the anthropomorphic, anatomically correct silverback gorilla that walks on all fours. Our Kong was intended to say, like, this isn't just a big gorilla or a big monkey. This is something that is its own species. It has its own set of rules, so we can do what we want and we really wanted to pay homage to what came before ... and yet do something completely different, and If anything, our Kong is meant to be a throwback to the '33 version. I don't think there's much similarity at all between our version and Peter [Jackson]'s Kong. That version is very much a scaled-up silverback gorilla, and ours is something that is slightly more exaggerated. A big mandate for us was, How do we make this feel like a classic movie monster?[56]

Co-producer Mary Parent also stated that Kong is still young and not fully grown as she explains, "Kong is an adolescent when we meet him in the film; he's still growing into his role as alpha".[57]

Ownership rights

While one of the most famous movie icons in history, King Kong's intellectual property status has been questioned since his creation, featuring in numerous allegations and court battles. The rights to the character have always been split up with no single exclusive rights holder. Different parties have also contested that various aspects are public domain material and therefore ineligible for copyright status.

When Merian C. Cooper created King Kong, he assumed that he owned the character, which he had conceived in 1929, outright. Cooper maintained that he had only licensed the character to RKO for the initial film and sequel, but had otherwise owned his own creation. In 1935, Cooper began to feel something was amiss when he was trying to get a Tarzan vs. King Kong project off the ground for Pioneer Pictures (where he had assumed management of the company). After David O. Selznick suggested the project to Cooper, the flurry of legal activity over using the Kong character that followed—Pioneer had become a completely independent company by this time and access to properties that RKO felt were theirs was no longer automatic—gave Cooper pause as he came to realize that he might not have full control over this product of his own imagination after all.[58]

Years later in 1962, Cooper found out that RKO was licensing the character through John Beck to Toho studios in Japan for a film project called King Kong vs. Godzilla. Cooper had assumed his rights were unassailable and was bitterly opposed to the project. In 1963 he filed a lawsuit to enjoin distribution of the movie against John Beck, as well as Toho and Universal (the film's U.S. copyright holder).[59] Cooper discovered that RKO had also profited from licensed products featuring the King Kong character such as model kits produced by Aurora Plastics Corporation. Cooper's executive assistant, Charles B. FitzSimons, stated that these companies should be negotiating through him and Cooper for such licensed products and not RKO. In a letter to Robert Bendick, Cooper stated:

My hassle is about King Kong. I created the character long before I came to RKO and have always believed I retained subsequent picture rights and other rights. I sold to RKO the right to make the one original picture King Kong and also, later, Son of Kong, but that was all.[60]

Cooper and his legal team offered up various documents to bolster the case that Cooper owned King Kong and had only licensed the character to RKO for two films, rather than selling him outright. Many people vouched for Cooper's claims, including David O. Selznick, who had written a letter to Mr. A. Loewenthal of the Famous Artists Syndicate in Chicago in 1932 stating (in regard to Kong), "The rights of this are owned by Mr. Merian C. Cooper."[60] But Cooper had lost key documents through the years (he discovered these papers were missing after he returned from his World War II military service) such as a key informal yet binding letter from Mr. Ayelsworth (the then-president of the RKO Studio Corp.) and a formal binding letter from Mr. B. B. Kahane (the current president of RKO Studio Corp.) confirming that Cooper had only licensed the rights to the character for the two RKO pictures and nothing more.[61]

Without these letters, it seemed Cooper's rights were relegated to the Lovelace novelization that he had copyrighted (he was able to make a deal for a Bantam Books paperback reprint and a Gold Key comic adaptation of the novel, but that was all that he could do). Cooper's lawyer had received a letter from John Beck's lawyer, Gordon E. Youngman, that stated:

For the sake of the record, I wish to state that I am not in negotiation with you or Mr. Cooper or anyone else to define Mr. Cooper's rights in respect of King Kong. His rights are well defined, and they are non-existent, except for certain limited publication rights.[62]

In a letter addressed to Douglas Burden, Cooper lamented:

It seems my hassle over King Kong is destined to be a protracted one. They'd make me sorry I ever invented the beast, if I weren't so fond of him! Makes me feel like Macbeth: "Bloody instructions which being taught return to plague the inventor."[62]

The rights over the character did not flare up again until 1975, when Universal Studios and Dino De Laurentiis were fighting over who would be able to do a King Kong remake for release the following year. De Laurentiis came up with $200,000 to buy the remake rights from RKO.[63] When Universal got wind of this, they filed a lawsuit against RKO, claiming that they had a verbal agreement from them regarding the remake. During the legal battles that followed, which eventually included RKO countersuing Universal, as well as De Laurentiis filing a lawsuit claiming interference, Colonel Richard Cooper (Merian's son and now head of the Cooper estate) jumped into the fray.[64]

During the battles, Universal discovered that the copyright of the Lovelace novelization had expired without renewal, thus making the King Kong story a public domain one. Universal argued that they should be able to make a movie based on the novel without infringing on anyone's copyright because the characters in the story were in the public domain within the context of the public domain story.[65] Richard Cooper then filed a cross-claim against RKO claiming that, while the publishing rights to the novel had not been renewed, his estate still had control over the plot/story of King Kong.[64]

In a four-day bench trial in Los Angeles, Judge Manuel Real made the final decision and gave his verdict on November 24, 1976, affirming that the King Kong novelization and serialization were indeed in the public domain, and Universal could make its movie as long as it did not infringe on original elements in the 1933 RKO film,[66] which had not passed into the public domain[67] (Universal postponed their plans to film a King Kong movie, called The Legend of King Kong, for at least 18 months, after cutting a deal with Dino De Laurentiis that included a percentage of box office profits from his remake).[68]

However, on December 6, 1976, Judge Real made a subsequent ruling, which held that all the rights in the name, character, and story of King Kong (outside of the original film and its sequel) belonged to Merian C. Cooper's estate. This ruling, which became known as the "Cooper judgment", expressly stated that it would not change the previous ruling that publishing rights of the novel and serialization were in the public domain. It was a huge victory that affirmed the position Merian C. Cooper had maintained for years.[66] Shortly thereafter, Richard Cooper sold all his rights (excluding worldwide book and periodical publishing rights) to Universal in December 1976. In 1980 Judge Real dismissed the claims that were brought forth by RKO and Universal four years earlier and reinstated the Cooper judgement.[69]

In 1982 Universal filed a lawsuit against Nintendo, which had created an impish ape character called Donkey Kong in 1981 and was reaping huge profits over the video game machines. Universal claimed that Nintendo was infringing on its copyright because Donkey Kong was a blatant rip-off of King Kong.[69] During the court battle and subsequent appeal, the courts ruled that Universal did not have exclusive trademark rights to the King Kong character. The courts ruled that trademark was not among the rights Cooper had sold to Universal, indicating that "Cooper plainly did not obtain any trademark rights in his judgment against RKO, since the California district court specifically found that King Kong had no secondary meaning."[67] While they had a majority of the rights, they did not outright own the King Kong name and character.[70] The courts ruling noted that the name, title, and character of Kong no longer signified a single source of origin so exclusive trademark rights were impossible.[71] The courts also pointed out that the Kong rights were held by three parties:

  • RKO owned the rights to the original film and its sequel.
  • The Dino De Laurentiis company (DDL) owned the rights to the 1976 remake.
  • Richard Cooper owned worldwide book and periodical publishing rights.[70]

The judge then ruled that "Universal thus owns only those rights in the King Kong name and character that RKO, Cooper, or DDL do not own."[72]

The court of appeals would also note:

First, Universal knew that it did not have trademark rights to King Kong, yet it proceeded to broadly assert such rights anyway. This amounted to a wanton and reckless disregard of Nintendo's rights.

Second, Universal did not stop after it asserted its rights to Nintendo. It embarked on a deliberate, systematic campaign to coerce all of Nintendo's third party licensees to either stop marketing Donkey Kong products or pay Universal royalties.

Finally, Universal's conduct amounted to an abuse of judicial process, and in that sense caused a longer harm to the public as a whole. Depending on the commercial results, Universal alternatively argued to the courts, first, that King Kong was a part of the public domain, and then second, that King Kong was not part of the public domain, and that Universal possessed exclusive trademark rights in it. Universal's assertions in court were based not on any good faith belief in their truth, but on the mistaken belief that it could use the courts to turn a profit.[73]

Because Universal misrepresented their degree of ownership of King Kong (claiming they had exclusive trademark rights when they knew that they did not) and tried to have it both ways in court regarding the "public domain" claims, the courts ruled that Universal acted in bad faith (see Universal City Studios, Inc. v. Nintendo Co., Ltd.). They were ordered to pay fines and all of Nintendo's legal costs from the lawsuit. That, along with the fact that the courts ruled that there was simply no likelihood of people confusing Donkey Kong with King Kong,[70] caused Universal to lose the case and the subsequent appeal.

Since the court case, Universal still retains the majority of the character rights. In 1986 they opened a King Kong ride called King Kong Encounter at their Universal Studios Tour theme park in Hollywood (which was destroyed in 2008 by a backlot fire), and followed it up with the Kongfrontation ride at their Orlando park in 1990 (which was closed down in 2002 due to maintenance issues). They also finally made a King Kong film of their own, King Kong (2005). In the summer of 2010, Universal opened a new 3D King Kong ride called King Kong: 360 3-D at their Hollywood park, replacing the destroyed King Kong Encounter.[74] On July 13, 2016, Universal opened a new King Kong attraction called Skull Island: Reign of Kong at Islands of Adventure in Orlando.[75] In July 2013, Legendary Pictures reached an agreement with Universal in which it will market, co-finance, and distribute Legendary's films for five years starting in 2014 and ending in 2019, the year that Legendary's similar agreement with Warner Bros. Pictures was set to expire. Later, in July 2014 at the San Diego Comic-Con, Legendary announced (as a product of its partnership with Universal), a King Kong origin story, initially titled Skull Island, with Universal distributing.[76] On December 12, 2014, the studio announced they had re-titled the film Kong: Skull Island. On September 10, 2015, it was announced that Universal would allow Legendary to move Kong: Skull Island to Warner Bros.,[77] so they could do a King Kong and Godzilla crossover film (in the continuity of the 2014 Godzilla movie), since Legendary still had the rights to make more Godzilla movies with Warner Bros. before their contract with Toho expired in 2020.[78][79]

As noted above, Richard Cooper, through the Merian C. Cooper Estate, retained publishing rights for the content that Judge Real had ruled on December 6, 1976, belonged to Richard Cooper. In 1990, they licensed a six-issue comic book adaptation of the novelization of the 1933 film to Monster Comics, and commissioned an illustrated novel in 1994 called Anthony Browne's King Kong. In 2013, they became involved with a musical stage play based on the story, called King Kong: The Eighth Wonder of the World which premiered in June 2013 in Australia[80][81] and then on Broadway in November 2018.[82] The production is involved with Global Creatures, the company behind the Walking with Dinosaurs arena show.[83] In 1996, artist/writer Joe DeVito partnered the Merian C. Cooper estate to write and/or illustrate various publications based on Merian C. Cooper's King Kong property through his company, DeVito ArtWorks, LLC. Through this partnership, DeVito created the prequel/sequel story Skull Island on which DeVito based a pair of original novels relating the origin of King Kong: Kong: King of Skull Island, and King Kong of Skull Island. In addition, the Cooper/DeVito collaboration resulted in an origin-themed comic book miniseries with Boom! Studios,[84] an expanded rewrite of the original Lovelace novelization, Merian C. Cooper's King Kong, (the original novelization's publishing rights are still in the public domain), and various crossovers with other franchises such as Doc Savage, Tarzan[85] and Planet of the Apes.[86] In 2016, DeVito ArtWorks, through its licensing program, licensed its King Kong property to RocketFizz for use in the marketing of a soft drink called King Kong Cola,[87] and had plans for a live action TV show to be co-produced between MarVista Entertainment and IM Global.[88] Other products that have been produced through this licensing program include Digital Trading Cards,[89] Board Games,[90] a Virtual Reality Arcade Game,[91] and a remake of the original King Kong Glow-In-The-Dark Model Kit.[92] In April 2016, Joe DeVito sued Legendary Pictures and Warner Bros., producers of the film Kong: Skull Island, for using elements of his Skull Island universe, which he claimed that he created and that the producers had used without his permission.[93] In August 2022, it was reported that DeVito had partnered with Disney to produce a live-action series tentatively called King Kong that will explore the origin story of Kong. The series is slated to stream on Disney+. Stephany Folsom is attached to write the series and to be executive produced by James Wan via his production company Atomic Monster Productions.[94]

RKO (whose rights consisted of only the original film and its sequel) signed over the North American, Latin American and Australian distribution rights to its film library to Ted Turner in a period spanning 1986 to 1989 via his company Turner Entertainment. Turner merged his company into Time Warner (now Warner Bros. Discovery) in 1996, which is how Warner Bros. owns distribution rights in those regions to those two films today, with the copyright over the films (including King Kong and The Son of Kong) remaining with RKO Pictures, LLC (various companies distribute the RKO library in other territories). In 1998, Warner Bros. Family Entertainment released the direct-to-video animated musical film The Mighty Kong, which re-tells the plot of the original 1933 film. 19 years later; in 2017, Warners co-produced the film Kong: Skull Island and in 2021 co-produced the film Godzilla vs. Kong, after Legendary Pictures brought the projects over from Universal[95] to build up the MonsterVerse. According to Godzilla Vs. Kong director Adam Wingard, the rights to the character may have also been transferred to Warner Bros.[96]

DDL (whose rights were limited to only their 1976 remake) did a sequel in 1986 called King Kong Lives (but they still needed Universal's permission to do so).[97] Today most of DDL's film library is owned by StudioCanal, which includes the rights to these two films. The domestic (North American) rights to the 1976 King Kong film still remain with the film's original distributor Paramount Pictures, with Trifecta Entertainment & Media handling television rights to the film via their license with Paramount.[citation needed]

Toho incarnations

 
The two depictions of Kong in the Toho films

In the 1960s, Japanese studio Toho licensed the character from RKO and produced two films that featured the character, King Kong vs. Godzilla (1962) and King Kong Escapes (1967). Toho's interpretation differed greatly from the original in size and abilities. Among kaiju, King Kong was suggested to be among the most powerful in terms of raw physical force, possessing strength and durability that rivaled that of Godzilla. As one of the few mammal-based kaiju, Kong's most distinctive feature was his intelligence. He demonstrated the ability to learn and adapt to an opponent's fighting style, identify and exploit weaknesses in an enemy, and utilize his environment to stage ambushes and traps.[98]

In King Kong vs. Godzilla, Kong was scaled to be 45 m (148 ft) tall. This version of Kong was given the ability to harvest electricity as a weapon and draw strength from electrical voltage.[99] In King Kong Escapes, Kong was scaled to be 20 m (66 ft) tall. This version was more similar to the original, where he relied on strength and intelligence to fight and survive.[100] Rather than residing on Skull Island, Toho's version of Kong resided on Faro Island in King Kong vs. Godzilla and on Mondo Island in King Kong Escapes.

In 1966, Toho planned to produce Operation Robinson Crusoe: King Kong vs. Ebirah as a co-production with Rankin/Bass Productions, however Ishirō Honda was unavailable at the time to direct the film and, as a result, Rankin/Bass backed out of the project, along with the King Kong license.[101] Toho still proceeded with the production, replacing King Kong with Godzilla at the last minute and shot the film as Ebirah, Horror of the Deep. Elements of King Kong's character remained in the film, reflected in Godzilla's uncharacteristic behavior and attraction to the female character Daiyo.[102] Toho and Rankin/Bass later negotiated their differences and co-produced King Kong Escapes in 1967, loosely based on Rankin/Bass' animated show.

Toho Studios wanted to remake King Kong vs. Godzilla, which was the most successful of the entire Godzilla series of films, in 1991 to celebrate the 30th anniversary of the film, as well as to celebrate Godzilla's upcoming 40th anniversary. However, they were unable to obtain the rights to use Kong, and initially intended to use Mechani-Kong as Godzilla's next adversary.[103] But it was soon learned that even using a mechanical creature who resembled Kong would be just as problematic legally and financially for them. As a result, the film became Godzilla vs. King Ghidorah, with one last failed attempt made to use Kong in 2004's Godzilla: Final Wars.[104] and also Godzilla (2014 video game) For the PS3 and PS4

Appearances

Film

Film U.S. release date Director(s) Story by Screenwriter(s) Producer(s) Distributor(s)
King Kong March 2, 1933 (1933-03-02) Merian C. Cooper and Ernest B. Schoedsack Edgar Wallace and Merian C. Cooper[105] James Creelman and Ruth Rose Merian C. Cooper and Ernest B. Schoedsack RKO Radio Pictures
Son of Kong December 22, 1933 (1933-12-22) Ernest B. Schoedsack Ruth Rose Ernest B. Schoedsack
King Kong vs. Godzilla August 11, 1962 (1962-08-11) Ishirō Honda Shinichi Sekizawa Tomoyuki Tanaka (Japan)
John Beck (U.S.)
Toho (Japan)
Universal International (U.S.)
King Kong Escapes July 22, 1967 (1967-07-22) Arthur Rankin Jr. Kaoru Mabuchi Tomoyuki Tanaka and Arthur Rankin Jr.
King Kong December 17, 1976 (1976-12-17) John Guillermin Lorenzo Semple Jr. Dino De Laurentiis Paramount Pictures
King Kong Lives December 19, 1986 (1986-12-19) Ronald Shusett and Steven Pressfield Martha Schumacher De Laurentiis Entertainment Group
The Mighty Kong June 16, 1998 (1998-06-16) Art Scott William J. Keenan Denis deVallance
Lyn Henderson
Warner Bros.
Kong: King of Atlantis November 22, 2005 (2005-11-22) Patrick Archibald Patrick Archibald
Sean Catherine Derek
Chuck Patton
Sean Catherine Derek Allen Bohbot BKN International
King Kong December 14, 2005 (2005-12-14) Peter Jackson Fran Walsh, Philippa Boyens and Peter Jackson Jan Blenkin, Carolynne Cunningham, Fran Walsh and Peter Jackson Universal Pictures
Kong: Return to the Jungle November 14, 2006 (2006-11-14) Stuart Evans Sean Catherine Derek
Rick Ungar
Allen Bohbot
Rick Ungar
BKN International
Kong: Skull Island March 10, 2017 (2017-03-10) Jordan Vogt-Roberts John Gatins Dan Gilroy, Max Borenstein, and Derek Connolly Thomas Tull, Jon Jashni, Alex Garcia and Mary Parent Warner Bros. Pictures
Godzilla vs. Kong March 31, 2021 (2021-03-31) Adam Wingard Terry Rossio, Michael Dougherty, and Zach Shields Eric Pearson and Max Borenstein

Television

Three television shows have been based on King Kong: The King Kong Show (1966), Kong: The Animated Series (2000), and Kong: King of the Apes (2016).

In late January 2021, Netflix and Legendary Entertainment announced that an anime series adaptation, titled Skull Island, based on the franchise is in the works.[106]

In August 2022, Disney Branded Television revealed that a live-action series exploring the origin story of Kong was in development for Disney+, written by Stephany Folsom and executive produced by James Wan via Atomic Monster Productions.[107]

Cultural impact

 
The DC Comics character Titano the Super-Ape (here seen climbing the Daily Planet building and confronting Superman) appears to be modeled on King Kong. From Superman #138, art by Curt Swan and Stan Kaye.

King Kong, as well as the series of films featuring him, have been featured many times in popular culture outside of the films themselves, in forms ranging from straight copies to parodies and joke references, and in media from comic books to video games.

The Beatles' 1968 animated film Yellow Submarine includes a scene of the characters opening a door to reveal King Kong abducting a woman from her bed.

The Simpsons episode "Treehouse of Horror III" features a segment called "King Homer" which parodies the plot of the original film, with Homer as Kong and Marge in the Ann Darrow role. It ends with King Homer marrying Marge and eating her father.[citation needed]

The 2005 animated film Chicken Little features a scene parodying King Kong, as Fish out of Water starts stacking magazines thrown in a pile, eventually becoming a model of the Empire State Building and some plane models, as he imitates King Kong in the iconic scene from the original film.

The British comedy TV series The Goodies made an episode called "Kitten Kong", in which a giant cat called Twinkle roams the streets of London, knocking over the British Telecom Tower.

The controversial World War II Dutch resistance fighter Christiaan Lindemans—eventually arrested on suspicion of having betrayed secrets to the Nazis—was nicknamed "King Kong" due to his being exceptionally tall.[108]

Frank Zappa and The Mothers of Invention recorded an instrumental about "King Kong" in 1967 and featured it on the album Uncle Meat. Zappa went on to make many other versions of the song on albums such as Make a Jazz Noise Here, You Can't Do That on Stage Anymore, Vol. 3, Ahead of Their Time, and Beat the Boots.

The Kinks recorded a song called "King Kong" as the B-side to their 1969 "Plastic Man" single.

In 1972, a 550 cm (18 ft) fiberglass statue of King Kong was erected in Birmingham, England.

The second track of The Jimmy Castor Bunch album Supersound from 1975 is titled "King Kong".[109]

Filk Music artists Ookla the Mok's "Song of Kong", which explores the reasons why King Kong and Godzilla should not be roommates, appears on their 2001 album Smell No Evil.[citation needed]

Daniel Johnston wrote and recorded a song called "King Kong" on his fifth self-released music cassette, Yip/Jump Music in 1983, rereleased on CD and double LP by Homestead Records in 1988. The song is an a cappella narrative of the original movie's story line. Tom Waits recorded a cover version of the song with various sound effects on the 2004 release, The Late Great Daniel Johnston: Discovered Covered.

ABBA recorded "King Kong Song" for their 1974 album Waterloo. Although later singled out by ABBA songwriters Benny Andersson and Björn Ulvaeus as one of their weakest tracks,[110] it was released as a single in 1977 to coincide with the 1976 film playing in theatres.

See also

References

Citations

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General and cited sources

  • Affeldt, Stefanie (2015). "Exterminating the Brute: Racism and Sexism in 'King Kong'". In Hund, Wulf D.; Mills, Charles W.; Sebastiani, Silvia (eds.). Simianization: Apes, Class, Gender, and Race. Racism Analysis Yearbook 6. Berlin: Lit Verlag. ISBN 978-3-643-90716-5.
  • Goldner, Orville; Turner, George E. (1975). The Making of King Kong: The Story Behind a Film Classic. A. S Barnes and Co.
  • Morton, Ray (2005). King Kong: The History of a Movie Icon. Applause Theater and Cinema Books. ISBN 1557836698.
  • Ryfle, Steve (1998). Japan's Favorite Mon-Star: The Unauthorized Biography of the Big G. ECW Press. ISBN 1-55022-348-8.
  • Van Hise, James (1993). Hot Blooded Dinosaur Movies. Pioneer Books.
  • Vaz, Mark Cotta (2005). Living Dangerously: The Adventures of Merian C. Cooper, Creator of King Kong. Villard. ISBN 1-4000-6276-4.

External links

king, kong, this, article, about, character, film, franchise, franchise, various, films, with, same, name, 1933, film, 1976, film, 2005, film, other, uses, disambiguation, fictional, giant, monster, resembling, gorilla, appeared, various, media, since, 1933, b. This article is about the character For the film franchise see King Kong franchise For the various films with the same name see King Kong 1933 film King Kong 1976 film and King Kong 2005 film For other uses see King Kong disambiguation King Kong is a fictional giant monster resembling a gorilla who has appeared in various media since 1933 He has been dubbed The Eighth Wonder of the World a phrase commonly used within the franchise His first appearance was in the novelization of the 1933 film King Kong from RKO Pictures with the film premiering a little over two months later Upon its initial release and subsequent re releases the film received universal acclaim A sequel quickly followed that same year with The Son of Kong featuring Little Kong Toho produced King Kong vs Godzilla 1962 featuring a giant Kong battling Toho s Godzilla and King Kong Escapes 1967 a film loosely based on Rankin Bass The King Kong Show 1966 1969 In 1976 Dino De Laurentiis produced a modern remake of the original film directed by John Guillermin A sequel King Kong Lives followed a decade later featuring a Lady Kong Another remake of the original this time set in 1933 was released in 2005 by filmmaker Peter Jackson King KongKing Kong franchise characterKing Kong as featured in promotional material for the original 1933 filmFirst appearanceKing Kong 1933 Created byEdgar WallaceMerian C CooperPortrayed byShoichi Hirose 1 1962 Haruo Nakajima 2 1967 Rick Baker 3 1976 Peter Elliot 1986 Andy Serkis 2005 Terry Notary 4 2017 Toby Kebbell 5 2017 Eric Petey 6 2021 Voiced byMurray Spivack 7 1933 vocal effects Peter Cullen 8 1976 vocal effects Peter Elliott 9 1986 vocal effects Frank Welker 10 11 Deep Rising uncredited cameo Scott McNeil 12 Kong The Animated Series Kong King of Atlantis Kong Return to the Jungle Andy Serkis 13 2005 vocal effects Lee Tockar 12 Kong King of the Apes Tarzan and Jane Seth Green 14 The Lego Batman Movie Binomial nomenclatureMegaprimatus Kong 2005 Gorilla gigans Kong Reborn Titanus Kong MonsterVerse In universe informationFull nameKongAliasesThe Eighth Wonder of the WorldSpeciesGiant gorilla like apeFamilyLittle Kong 1933 Lady Kong 1986 Baby Kong 1986 Deceased parents MonsterVerse HomeSkull Island Mondo Island The King Kong Show Kong Island Kong The Animated Series Hollow Earth MonsterVerse Kong King of the Apes Kong Skull Island 2017 set in 1973 is part of Legendary Entertainment s MonsterVerse which began with Legendary s reboot of Godzilla in 2014 A sequel Godzilla vs Kong once again pitting the characters against one another was released in March 2021 The character of King Kong has become one of the world s most famous movie icons having inspired a number of sequels remakes spin offs imitators parodies cartoons books comics video games theme park rides and a stage play 15 King Kong has also crossed over into other franchises such as Planet of the Apes 16 and encountered characters from other franchises in crossover media such as the Toho movie monster Godzilla as well as pulp characters Doc Savage and Tarzan His role in the different narratives varies ranging from a rampaging monster to a tragic antihero Contents 1 Overview 1 1 Conception and creation 1 2 Etymology 1 3 Appearances and abilities 1 4 Ownership rights 1 5 Toho incarnations 2 Appearances 2 1 Film 2 2 Television 3 Cultural impact 4 See also 5 References 5 1 Citations 5 2 General and cited sources 6 External linksOverview Edit King Kong graphics at Empire State Building The King Kong character was conceived and created by American filmmaker Merian C Cooper In the original film the character s name is Kong a name given to him by the inhabitants of the fictional Skull Island in the Indian Ocean where Kong lives along with other oversized animals such as plesiosaurs pterosaurs and various dinosaurs An American film crew led by Carl Denham captures Kong and takes him to New York City to be exhibited as the Eighth Wonder of the World Kong escapes and climbs the Empire State Building only to fall from the skyscraper after being attacked by biplanes with guns Denham comments it wasn t the aeroplanes It was beauty killed the beast for he climbs the building in the first place only in an attempt to protect Ann Darrow an actress originally kidnapped by the natives of the island and offered up to Kong as a sacrifice in the 1976 remake her character is named Dwan A pseudo documentary about Skull Island that appears on the DVD for the 2005 remake originally seen on the Sci Fi Channel at the time of its theatrical release gives Kong s scientific name as Megaprimatus kong 17 Megaprimatus deriving from the prefix mega and the Latin words primate and primatus means big primate or big supreme being and states that his species may be related to Gigantopithecus though that genus of giant ape is more closely related to orangutans than to gorillas Conception and creation Edit Merian C Cooper glances up at his creation Merian C Cooper became fascinated by gorillas at the age of 6 18 In 1899 he was given a book from his uncle called Explorations and Adventures in Equatorial Africa 19 The book written in 1861 chronicled the adventures of Paul Du Chaillu in Africa and his various encounters with the natives and wildlife there 20 Cooper became fascinated with the stories involving the gorillas in particular Du Chaillu s depiction of a particular gorilla known for its extraordinary size 21 that the natives described as invincible and the King of the African Forest 22 When Du Chaillu and some natives encountered a gorilla later in the book he described it as a hellish dream creature that was half man half beast 23 As an adult Cooper became involved in the motion picture industry While filming The Four Feathers in Africa he came into contact with a family of baboons 24 This gave him the idea to make a picture about primates 25 A year later when he got to RKO Cooper wanted to film a terror gorilla picture As the story was being fleshed out Cooper decided to make his gorilla giant sized Cooper stated that the idea of Kong fighting warplanes on top of a building came from him seeing a plane flying over the New York Insurance Building then the tallest building in the world 26 He came up with the ending before the rest of the story as he stated Without any conscious effort of thought I immediately saw in my mind s eye a giant gorilla on top of the building 27 Cooper also was influenced by Douglas Burden s accounts of the Komodo dragon 28 and wanted to pit his terror gorilla against dinosaur sized versions of these reptiles stating to Burden I also had firmly in mind to giantize both the gorilla and your dragons to make them really huge However I always believed in personalizing and focusing attention on one main character and from the very beginning I intended to make it the gigantic gorilla no matter what else I surrounded him with 28 Around this time Cooper began to refer to his project as a giant terror gorilla picture featuring a gigantic semi humanoid gorilla pitted against modern civilization 29 When designing King Kong Cooper wanted him to be a nightmarish gorilla monster As he described Kong in a 1930 memo His hands and feet have the size and strength of steam shovels his girth is that of a steam boiler This is a monster with the strength of a hundred men But more terrifying is the head a nightmare head with bloodshot eyes and jagged teeth set under a thick mat of hair a face half beast half human 30 Willis O Brien created an oil painting depicting the giant gorilla menacing a jungle heroine and hunter for Cooper 31 32 However when it came time for O Brien and Marcel Delgado to sculpt the animation model Cooper decided to backpedal on the half human look for the creature and became adamant that Kong be a gorilla O Brien on the other hand wanted him to be almost human like to gain audience empathy and told Delgado to make that ape almost human 33 Cooper laughed at the end result saying that it looked like a cross between a monkey and a man with very long hair 33 For the second model O Brien again asked Delgado to add human features but to tone it down somewhat The end result which was rejected was described as looking like a missing link 33 Disappointed Cooper stated I want Kong to be the fiercest most brutal monstrous damned thing that has ever been seen 33 On December 22 1931 Cooper got the dimensions of a bull gorilla from the American Museum of Natural History telling O Brien Now that s what I want 33 When the final model was created it had the basic look of a gorilla but managed to retain some human like qualities For example Delgado streamlined the body by removing the distinctive paunch and rump of a gorilla 34 O Brien would incorporate some characteristics and nuances of an earlier creature he had created in 1915 for the silent short The Dinosaur and the Missing Link into the general look and personality of Kong even going as far as to refer to the creature as Kong s ancestor 35 36 When it came time to film Cooper agreed that Kong should walk upright at times mostly in the New York sequences in order to appear more intimidating 37 Etymology Edit Merian C Cooper said he was very fond of strong hard sounding words that started with the letter K Some of his favorite words were Komodo Kodiak and Kodak 38 When Cooper was envisioning his giant terror gorilla idea he wanted to capture a real gorilla from the Congo and have it fight a real Komodo dragon on Komodo Island this scenario would eventually evolve into Kong s battle with the tyrannosaur on Skull Island when the film was produced a few years later at RKO Cooper s friend Douglas Burden s trip to the island of Komodo and his encounter with the Komodo dragons was a big influence on the Kong story 39 Cooper was fascinated by Burden s adventures as chronicled in his book Dragon Lizards of Komodo where he referred to the animal as the King of Komodo 38 It was this phrase along with Komodo and Kongo sic and his overall love for hard sounding K words 40 that gave him the idea to name the giant ape Kong He loved the name as it had a mystery sound to it After Cooper got to RKO British mystery writer Edgar Wallace was contracted to write the first draft of the screen story It was simply referred to as The Beast RKO executives were unimpressed with the bland title David O Selznick suggested Jungle Beast as the film s new title 41 but Cooper was unimpressed and wanted to name the film after the main character He stated he liked the mystery word aspect of Kong s name and that the film should carry the name of the leading mysterious romantic savage creature of the story such as with Dracula and Frankenstein 41 RKO sent a memo to Cooper suggesting the titles Kong King of Beasts Kong The Jungle King and Kong The Jungle Beast which combined his and Selznick s proposed titles 41 As time went on Cooper would eventually name the story simply Kong while Ruth Rose was writing the final version of the screenplay Because David O Selznick thought that audiences would think that the film with the one word title of Kong would be mistaken as a docudrama like Grass and Chang which were one word titled films that Cooper had earlier produced he added the King to Kong s name in order to differentiate it 42 Appearances and abilities Edit In his first appearance in King Kong 1933 Kong was a gigantic prehistoric ape 43 While gorilla like in appearance he had a vaguely humanoid look and at times walked upright in an anthropomorphic manner 37 Like most simians Kong possesses semi human intelligence and great physical strength Kong s size changes drastically throughout the course of the film While creator Merian C Cooper envisioned Kong as being 40 to 50 feet tall 44 animator Willis O Brien and his crew built the models and sets scaling Kong to be only 18 feet 5 5 m tall on Skull Island and rescaled to be 24 feet 7 3 m tall in New York 45 This did not stop Cooper from playing around with Kong s size as he directed the special effect sequences by manipulating the sizes of the miniatures and the camera angles he made Kong appear a lot larger than O Brien wanted even as large as 60 feet 18 3 m in some scenes As Cooper stated in an interview I was a great believer in constantly changing Kong s height to fit the settings and the illusions He s different in almost every shot sometimes he s only 18 feet tall and sometimes 60 feet or larger This broke every rule that O Bie and his animators had ever worked with but I felt confident that if the scenes moved with excitement and beauty the audience would accept any height that fitted into the scene For example if Kong had only been 18 feet high on the top of the Empire State Building he would have been lost like a little bug I constantly juggled the heights of trees and dozens of other things The one essential thing was to make the audience enthralled with the character of Kong so that they wouldn t notice or care that he was 18 feet high or 40 feet just as long as he fitted the mystery and excitement of the scenes and action 46 Concurrently the Kong bust made for the film was built in scale with a 40 foot 12 2 m ape 47 while the full sized hand of Kong was built in scale with a 70 foot 21 3 m ape 48 Meanwhile RKO s promotional materials listed Kong s official height as 50 feet 15 2 m 43 In the 1960s Toho Studios from Japan licensed the character for the films King Kong vs Godzilla and King Kong Escapes For more details on these versions of the character see below In 1975 Italian producer Dino De Laurentiis paid RKO for the remake rights to King Kong This resulted in King Kong 1976 This Kong was an upright walking anthropomorphic ape appearing even more human like than the original Also like the original this Kong had semi human intelligence and vast strength In the 1976 film Kong was scaled to be 42 feet 12 8 m tall on Skull island and rescaled to be 55 feet 16 8 m tall in New York 49 Ten years later Dino De Laurentiis got the approval from Universal to do a sequel called King Kong Lives This Kong had more or less the same appearance and abilities but tended to walk on his knuckles more often and was enlarged scaled to 60 feet 18 3 m 50 Universal Studios had planned to do a King Kong remake as far back as 1976 They finally followed through almost 30 years later with a three hour film directed by Peter Jackson Jackson opted to make Kong a gigantic silverback gorilla without any anthropomorphic features This Kong looked and behaved more like a real gorilla he had a large herbivore s belly walked on his knuckles without any upright posture and even beat his chest with his palms as opposed to clenched fists In order to ground his Kong in realism Jackson and the Weta Digital crew gave a name to his fictitious species Megaprimatus kong and suggested it to have evolved from the Gigantopithecus Kong was the last of his kind He was portrayed in the film as being quite old with graying fur and battle worn with scars wounds and a crooked jaw from his many fights against rival creatures He is the dominant being on the island the king of his world But like his film predecessors he possesses considerable intelligence and great physical strength he also appears far more nimble and agile This Kong was scaled to a consistent height of 25 feet 7 6 m tall on both Skull Island and in New York 51 Jackson describes his central character We assumed that Kong is the last surviving member of his species He had a mother and a father and maybe brothers and sisters but they re dead He s the last of the huge gorillas that live on Skull Island when he goes there will be no more He s a very lonely creature absolutely solitary It must be one of the loneliest existences you could ever possibly imagine Every day he has to battle for his survival against very formidable dinosaurs on the island and it s not easy for him He s carrying the scars of many former encounters with dinosaurs I m imagining he s probably 100 to 120 years old by the time our story begins And he has never felt a single bit of empathy for another living creature in his long life it has been a brutal life that he s lived 52 In the 2017 film Kong Skull Island Kong is scaled to be 104 feet 31 7 m tall 53 making it the second largest and largest American incarnation in the series until the 2021 film Godzilla vs Kong in which he became the largest incarnation in the series standing at 337 feet 102 7 m 54 Director Jordan Vogt Roberts stated in regard to Kong s immense stature The thing that most interested me was how big do you need to make Kong so that when someone lands on this island and doesn t believe in the idea of myth the idea of wonder when we live in a world of social and civil unrest and everything is crumbling around us and technology and facts are taking over how big does this creature need to be so that when you stand on the ground and you look up at it the only thing that can go through your mind is That s a god 55 He also stated that the original 1933 look was the inspiration for the design saying We sort of went back to the 1933 version in the sense that he s a bipedal creature that walks in an upright position as opposed to the anthropomorphic anatomically correct silverback gorilla that walks on all fours Our Kong was intended to say like this isn t just a big gorilla or a big monkey This is something that is its own species It has its own set of rules so we can do what we want and we really wanted to pay homage to what came before and yet do something completely different and If anything our Kong is meant to be a throwback to the 33 version I don t think there s much similarity at all between our version and Peter Jackson s Kong That version is very much a scaled up silverback gorilla and ours is something that is slightly more exaggerated A big mandate for us was How do we make this feel like a classic movie monster 56 Co producer Mary Parent also stated that Kong is still young and not fully grown as she explains Kong is an adolescent when we meet him in the film he s still growing into his role as alpha 57 Ownership rights Edit While one of the most famous movie icons in history King Kong s intellectual property status has been questioned since his creation featuring in numerous allegations and court battles The rights to the character have always been split up with no single exclusive rights holder Different parties have also contested that various aspects are public domain material and therefore ineligible for copyright status When Merian C Cooper created King Kong he assumed that he owned the character which he had conceived in 1929 outright Cooper maintained that he had only licensed the character to RKO for the initial film and sequel but had otherwise owned his own creation In 1935 Cooper began to feel something was amiss when he was trying to get a Tarzan vs King Kong project off the ground for Pioneer Pictures where he had assumed management of the company After David O Selznick suggested the project to Cooper the flurry of legal activity over using the Kong character that followed Pioneer had become a completely independent company by this time and access to properties that RKO felt were theirs was no longer automatic gave Cooper pause as he came to realize that he might not have full control over this product of his own imagination after all 58 Years later in 1962 Cooper found out that RKO was licensing the character through John Beck to Toho studios in Japan for a film project called King Kong vs Godzilla Cooper had assumed his rights were unassailable and was bitterly opposed to the project In 1963 he filed a lawsuit to enjoin distribution of the movie against John Beck as well as Toho and Universal the film s U S copyright holder 59 Cooper discovered that RKO had also profited from licensed products featuring the King Kong character such as model kits produced by Aurora Plastics Corporation Cooper s executive assistant Charles B FitzSimons stated that these companies should be negotiating through him and Cooper for such licensed products and not RKO In a letter to Robert Bendick Cooper stated My hassle is about King Kong I created the character long before I came to RKO and have always believed I retained subsequent picture rights and other rights I sold to RKO the right to make the one original picture King Kong and also later Son of Kong but that was all 60 Cooper and his legal team offered up various documents to bolster the case that Cooper owned King Kong and had only licensed the character to RKO for two films rather than selling him outright Many people vouched for Cooper s claims including David O Selznick who had written a letter to Mr A Loewenthal of the Famous Artists Syndicate in Chicago in 1932 stating in regard to Kong The rights of this are owned by Mr Merian C Cooper 60 But Cooper had lost key documents through the years he discovered these papers were missing after he returned from his World War II military service such as a key informal yet binding letter from Mr Ayelsworth the then president of the RKO Studio Corp and a formal binding letter from Mr B B Kahane the current president of RKO Studio Corp confirming that Cooper had only licensed the rights to the character for the two RKO pictures and nothing more 61 Without these letters it seemed Cooper s rights were relegated to the Lovelace novelization that he had copyrighted he was able to make a deal for a Bantam Books paperback reprint and a Gold Key comic adaptation of the novel but that was all that he could do Cooper s lawyer had received a letter from John Beck s lawyer Gordon E Youngman that stated For the sake of the record I wish to state that I am not in negotiation with you or Mr Cooper or anyone else to define Mr Cooper s rights in respect of King Kong His rights are well defined and they are non existent except for certain limited publication rights 62 In a letter addressed to Douglas Burden Cooper lamented It seems my hassle over King Kong is destined to be a protracted one They d make me sorry I ever invented the beast if I weren t so fond of him Makes me feel like Macbeth Bloody instructions which being taught return to plague the inventor 62 The rights over the character did not flare up again until 1975 when Universal Studios and Dino De Laurentiis were fighting over who would be able to do a King Kong remake for release the following year De Laurentiis came up with 200 000 to buy the remake rights from RKO 63 When Universal got wind of this they filed a lawsuit against RKO claiming that they had a verbal agreement from them regarding the remake During the legal battles that followed which eventually included RKO countersuing Universal as well as De Laurentiis filing a lawsuit claiming interference Colonel Richard Cooper Merian s son and now head of the Cooper estate jumped into the fray 64 During the battles Universal discovered that the copyright of the Lovelace novelization had expired without renewal thus making the King Kong story a public domain one Universal argued that they should be able to make a movie based on the novel without infringing on anyone s copyright because the characters in the story were in the public domain within the context of the public domain story 65 Richard Cooper then filed a cross claim against RKO claiming that while the publishing rights to the novel had not been renewed his estate still had control over the plot story of King Kong 64 In a four day bench trial in Los Angeles Judge Manuel Real made the final decision and gave his verdict on November 24 1976 affirming that the King Kong novelization and serialization were indeed in the public domain and Universal could make its movie as long as it did not infringe on original elements in the 1933 RKO film 66 which had not passed into the public domain 67 Universal postponed their plans to film a King Kong movie called The Legend of King Kong for at least 18 months after cutting a deal with Dino De Laurentiis that included a percentage of box office profits from his remake 68 However on December 6 1976 Judge Real made a subsequent ruling which held that all the rights in the name character and story of King Kong outside of the original film and its sequel belonged to Merian C Cooper s estate This ruling which became known as the Cooper judgment expressly stated that it would not change the previous ruling that publishing rights of the novel and serialization were in the public domain It was a huge victory that affirmed the position Merian C Cooper had maintained for years 66 Shortly thereafter Richard Cooper sold all his rights excluding worldwide book and periodical publishing rights to Universal in December 1976 In 1980 Judge Real dismissed the claims that were brought forth by RKO and Universal four years earlier and reinstated the Cooper judgement 69 In 1982 Universal filed a lawsuit against Nintendo which had created an impish ape character called Donkey Kong in 1981 and was reaping huge profits over the video game machines Universal claimed that Nintendo was infringing on its copyright because Donkey Kong was a blatant rip off of King Kong 69 During the court battle and subsequent appeal the courts ruled that Universal did not have exclusive trademark rights to the King Kong character The courts ruled that trademark was not among the rights Cooper had sold to Universal indicating that Cooper plainly did not obtain any trademark rights in his judgment against RKO since the California district court specifically found that King Kong had no secondary meaning 67 While they had a majority of the rights they did not outright own the King Kong name and character 70 The courts ruling noted that the name title and character of Kong no longer signified a single source of origin so exclusive trademark rights were impossible 71 The courts also pointed out that the Kong rights were held by three parties RKO owned the rights to the original film and its sequel The Dino De Laurentiis company DDL owned the rights to the 1976 remake Richard Cooper owned worldwide book and periodical publishing rights 70 The judge then ruled that Universal thus owns only those rights in the King Kong name and character that RKO Cooper or DDL do not own 72 The court of appeals would also note First Universal knew that it did not have trademark rights to King Kong yet it proceeded to broadly assert such rights anyway This amounted to a wanton and reckless disregard of Nintendo s rights Second Universal did not stop after it asserted its rights to Nintendo It embarked on a deliberate systematic campaign to coerce all of Nintendo s third party licensees to either stop marketing Donkey Kong products or pay Universal royalties Finally Universal s conduct amounted to an abuse of judicial process and in that sense caused a longer harm to the public as a whole Depending on the commercial results Universal alternatively argued to the courts first that King Kong was a part of the public domain and then second that King Kong was not part of the public domain and that Universal possessed exclusive trademark rights in it Universal s assertions in court were based not on any good faith belief in their truth but on the mistaken belief that it could use the courts to turn a profit 73 Because Universal misrepresented their degree of ownership of King Kong claiming they had exclusive trademark rights when they knew that they did not and tried to have it both ways in court regarding the public domain claims the courts ruled that Universal acted in bad faith see Universal City Studios Inc v Nintendo Co Ltd They were ordered to pay fines and all of Nintendo s legal costs from the lawsuit That along with the fact that the courts ruled that there was simply no likelihood of people confusing Donkey Kong with King Kong 70 caused Universal to lose the case and the subsequent appeal Since the court case Universal still retains the majority of the character rights In 1986 they opened a King Kong ride called King Kong Encounter at their Universal Studios Tour theme park in Hollywood which was destroyed in 2008 by a backlot fire and followed it up with the Kongfrontation ride at their Orlando park in 1990 which was closed down in 2002 due to maintenance issues They also finally made a King Kong film of their own King Kong 2005 In the summer of 2010 Universal opened a new 3D King Kong ride called King Kong 360 3 D at their Hollywood park replacing the destroyed King Kong Encounter 74 On July 13 2016 Universal opened a new King Kong attraction called Skull Island Reign of Kong at Islands of Adventure in Orlando 75 In July 2013 Legendary Pictures reached an agreement with Universal in which it will market co finance and distribute Legendary s films for five years starting in 2014 and ending in 2019 the year that Legendary s similar agreement with Warner Bros Pictures was set to expire Later in July 2014 at the San Diego Comic Con Legendary announced as a product of its partnership with Universal a King Kong origin story initially titled Skull Island with Universal distributing 76 On December 12 2014 the studio announced they had re titled the film Kong Skull Island On September 10 2015 it was announced that Universal would allow Legendary to move Kong Skull Island to Warner Bros 77 so they could do a King Kong and Godzilla crossover film in the continuity of the 2014 Godzilla movie since Legendary still had the rights to make more Godzilla movies with Warner Bros before their contract with Toho expired in 2020 78 79 As noted above Richard Cooper through the Merian C Cooper Estate retained publishing rights for the content that Judge Real had ruled on December 6 1976 belonged to Richard Cooper In 1990 they licensed a six issue comic book adaptation of the novelization of the 1933 film to Monster Comics and commissioned an illustrated novel in 1994 called Anthony Browne s King Kong In 2013 they became involved with a musical stage play based on the story called King Kong The Eighth Wonder of the World which premiered in June 2013 in Australia 80 81 and then on Broadway in November 2018 82 The production is involved with Global Creatures the company behind the Walking with Dinosaurs arena show 83 In 1996 artist writer Joe DeVito partnered the Merian C Cooper estate to write and or illustrate various publications based on Merian C Cooper s King Kong property through his company DeVito ArtWorks LLC Through this partnership DeVito created the prequel sequel story Skull Island on which DeVito based a pair of original novels relating the origin of King Kong Kong King of Skull Island and King Kong of Skull Island In addition the Cooper DeVito collaboration resulted in an origin themed comic book miniseries with Boom Studios 84 an expanded rewrite of the original Lovelace novelization Merian C Cooper s King Kong the original novelization s publishing rights are still in the public domain and various crossovers with other franchises such as Doc Savage Tarzan 85 and Planet of the Apes 86 In 2016 DeVito ArtWorks through its licensing program licensed its King Kong property to RocketFizz for use in the marketing of a soft drink called King Kong Cola 87 and had plans for a live action TV show to be co produced between MarVista Entertainment and IM Global 88 Other products that have been produced through this licensing program include Digital Trading Cards 89 Board Games 90 a Virtual Reality Arcade Game 91 and a remake of the original King Kong Glow In The Dark Model Kit 92 In April 2016 Joe DeVito sued Legendary Pictures and Warner Bros producers of the film Kong Skull Island for using elements of his Skull Island universe which he claimed that he created and that the producers had used without his permission 93 In August 2022 it was reported that DeVito had partnered with Disney to produce a live action series tentatively called King Kong that will explore the origin story of Kong The series is slated to stream on Disney Stephany Folsom is attached to write the series and to be executive produced by James Wan via his production company Atomic Monster Productions 94 RKO whose rights consisted of only the original film and its sequel signed over the North American Latin American and Australian distribution rights to its film library to Ted Turner in a period spanning 1986 to 1989 via his company Turner Entertainment Turner merged his company into Time Warner now Warner Bros Discovery in 1996 which is how Warner Bros owns distribution rights in those regions to those two films today with the copyright over the films including King Kong and The Son of Kong remaining with RKO Pictures LLC various companies distribute the RKO library in other territories In 1998 Warner Bros Family Entertainment released the direct to video animated musical film The Mighty Kong which re tells the plot of the original 1933 film 19 years later in 2017 Warners co produced the film Kong Skull Island and in 2021 co produced the film Godzilla vs Kong after Legendary Pictures brought the projects over from Universal 95 to build up the MonsterVerse According to Godzilla Vs Kong director Adam Wingard the rights to the character may have also been transferred to Warner Bros 96 DDL whose rights were limited to only their 1976 remake did a sequel in 1986 called King Kong Lives but they still needed Universal s permission to do so 97 Today most of DDL s film library is owned by StudioCanal which includes the rights to these two films The domestic North American rights to the 1976 King Kong film still remain with the film s original distributor Paramount Pictures with Trifecta Entertainment amp Media handling television rights to the film via their license with Paramount citation needed Toho incarnations Edit The two depictions of Kong in the Toho films In the 1960s Japanese studio Toho licensed the character from RKO and produced two films that featured the character King Kong vs Godzilla 1962 and King Kong Escapes 1967 Toho s interpretation differed greatly from the original in size and abilities Among kaiju King Kong was suggested to be among the most powerful in terms of raw physical force possessing strength and durability that rivaled that of Godzilla As one of the few mammal based kaiju Kong s most distinctive feature was his intelligence He demonstrated the ability to learn and adapt to an opponent s fighting style identify and exploit weaknesses in an enemy and utilize his environment to stage ambushes and traps 98 In King Kong vs Godzilla Kong was scaled to be 45 m 148 ft tall This version of Kong was given the ability to harvest electricity as a weapon and draw strength from electrical voltage 99 In King Kong Escapes Kong was scaled to be 20 m 66 ft tall This version was more similar to the original where he relied on strength and intelligence to fight and survive 100 Rather than residing on Skull Island Toho s version of Kong resided on Faro Island in King Kong vs Godzilla and on Mondo Island in King Kong Escapes In 1966 Toho planned to produce Operation Robinson Crusoe King Kong vs Ebirah as a co production with Rankin Bass Productions however Ishirō Honda was unavailable at the time to direct the film and as a result Rankin Bass backed out of the project along with the King Kong license 101 Toho still proceeded with the production replacing King Kong with Godzilla at the last minute and shot the film as Ebirah Horror of the Deep Elements of King Kong s character remained in the film reflected in Godzilla s uncharacteristic behavior and attraction to the female character Daiyo 102 Toho and Rankin Bass later negotiated their differences and co produced King Kong Escapes in 1967 loosely based on Rankin Bass animated show Toho Studios wanted to remake King Kong vs Godzilla which was the most successful of the entire Godzilla series of films in 1991 to celebrate the 30th anniversary of the film as well as to celebrate Godzilla s upcoming 40th anniversary However they were unable to obtain the rights to use Kong and initially intended to use Mechani Kong as Godzilla s next adversary 103 But it was soon learned that even using a mechanical creature who resembled Kong would be just as problematic legally and financially for them As a result the film became Godzilla vs King Ghidorah with one last failed attempt made to use Kong in 2004 s Godzilla Final Wars 104 and also Godzilla 2014 video game For the PS3 and PS4Appearances EditMain article King Kong franchise Film Edit Film U S release date Director s Story by Screenwriter s Producer s Distributor s King Kong March 2 1933 1933 03 02 Merian C Cooper and Ernest B Schoedsack Edgar Wallace and Merian C Cooper 105 James Creelman and Ruth Rose Merian C Cooper and Ernest B Schoedsack RKO Radio PicturesSon of Kong December 22 1933 1933 12 22 Ernest B Schoedsack Ruth Rose Ernest B SchoedsackKing Kong vs Godzilla August 11 1962 1962 08 11 Ishirō Honda Shinichi Sekizawa Tomoyuki Tanaka Japan John Beck U S Toho Japan Universal International U S King Kong Escapes July 22 1967 1967 07 22 Arthur Rankin Jr Kaoru Mabuchi Tomoyuki Tanaka and Arthur Rankin Jr King Kong December 17 1976 1976 12 17 John Guillermin Lorenzo Semple Jr Dino De Laurentiis Paramount PicturesKing Kong Lives December 19 1986 1986 12 19 Ronald Shusett and Steven Pressfield Martha Schumacher De Laurentiis Entertainment GroupThe Mighty Kong June 16 1998 1998 06 16 Art Scott William J Keenan Denis deVallanceLyn Henderson Warner Bros Kong King of Atlantis November 22 2005 2005 11 22 Patrick Archibald Patrick ArchibaldSean Catherine DerekChuck Patton Sean Catherine Derek Allen Bohbot BKN InternationalKing Kong December 14 2005 2005 12 14 Peter Jackson Fran Walsh Philippa Boyens and Peter Jackson Jan Blenkin Carolynne Cunningham Fran Walsh and Peter Jackson Universal PicturesKong Return to the Jungle November 14 2006 2006 11 14 Stuart Evans Sean Catherine DerekRick Ungar Allen BohbotRick Ungar BKN InternationalKong Skull Island March 10 2017 2017 03 10 Jordan Vogt Roberts John Gatins Dan Gilroy Max Borenstein and Derek Connolly Thomas Tull Jon Jashni Alex Garcia and Mary Parent Warner Bros PicturesGodzilla vs Kong March 31 2021 2021 03 31 Adam Wingard Terry Rossio Michael Dougherty and Zach Shields Eric Pearson and Max BorensteinTelevision Edit Three television shows have been based on King Kong The King Kong Show 1966 Kong The Animated Series 2000 and Kong King of the Apes 2016 In late January 2021 Netflix and Legendary Entertainment announced that an anime series adaptation titled Skull Island based on the franchise is in the works 106 In August 2022 Disney Branded Television revealed that a live action series exploring the origin story of Kong was in development for Disney written by Stephany Folsom and executive produced by James Wan via Atomic Monster Productions 107 Cultural impact EditMain article King Kong in popular culture This section appears to contain trivial minor or unrelated references to popular culture Please reorganize this content to explain the subject s impact on popular culture providing citations to reliable secondary sources rather than simply listing appearances Unsourced material may be challenged and removed October 2018 The DC Comics character Titano the Super Ape here seen climbing the Daily Planet building and confronting Superman appears to be modeled on King Kong From Superman 138 art by Curt Swan and Stan Kaye King Kong as well as the series of films featuring him have been featured many times in popular culture outside of the films themselves in forms ranging from straight copies to parodies and joke references and in media from comic books to video games The Beatles 1968 animated film Yellow Submarine includes a scene of the characters opening a door to reveal King Kong abducting a woman from her bed The Simpsons episode Treehouse of Horror III features a segment called King Homer which parodies the plot of the original film with Homer as Kong and Marge in the Ann Darrow role It ends with King Homer marrying Marge and eating her father citation needed The 2005 animated film Chicken Little features a scene parodying King Kong as Fish out of Water starts stacking magazines thrown in a pile eventually becoming a model of the Empire State Building and some plane models as he imitates King Kong in the iconic scene from the original film The British comedy TV series The Goodies made an episode called Kitten Kong in which a giant cat called Twinkle roams the streets of London knocking over the British Telecom Tower The controversial World War II Dutch resistance fighter Christiaan Lindemans eventually arrested on suspicion of having betrayed secrets to the Nazis was nicknamed King Kong due to his being exceptionally tall 108 Frank Zappa and The Mothers of Invention recorded an instrumental about King Kong in 1967 and featured it on the album Uncle Meat Zappa went on to make many other versions of the song on albums such as Make a Jazz Noise Here You Can t Do That on Stage Anymore Vol 3 Ahead of Their Time and Beat the Boots The Kinks recorded a song called King Kong as the B side to their 1969 Plastic Man single In 1972 a 550 cm 18 ft fiberglass statue of King Kong was erected in Birmingham England The second track of The Jimmy Castor Bunch album Supersound from 1975 is titled King Kong 109 Filk Music artists Ookla the Mok s Song of Kong which explores the reasons why King Kong and Godzilla should not be roommates appears on their 2001 album Smell No Evil citation needed Daniel Johnston wrote and recorded a song called King Kong on his fifth self released music cassette Yip Jump Music in 1983 rereleased on CD and double LP by Homestead Records in 1988 The song is an a cappella narrative of the original movie s story line Tom Waits recorded a cover version of the song with various sound effects on the 2004 release The Late Great Daniel Johnston Discovered Covered ABBA recorded King Kong Song for their 1974 album Waterloo Although later singled out by ABBA songwriters Benny Andersson and Bjorn Ulvaeus as one of their weakest tracks 110 it was released as a single in 1977 to coincide with the 1976 film playing in theatres See also EditList of fictional primatesReferences EditCitations Edit Ryfle 1998 p 353 Ryfle 1998 p 178 Lambie Ryan March 10 2017 The Struggles of King Kong 76 Den of Geek Archived from the original on April 3 2018 Retrieved March 28 2018 Sullivan Kevin May 11 2016 Toby Kebbell clears up Kong Skull Island rumors Entertainment Weekly Archived from the original on May 20 2016 Retrieved May 11 2016 Kong Skull Island 2017 End Credits Legendary Pictures Archived from the original on June 13 2017 Retrieved April 9 2017 Failes Ian April 15 2021 How Kong s ocean showdown with Godzilla was made befores amp afters Archived from the original on April 23 2021 Retrieved April 15 2021 Murray Spivack is the voice of King Kong in King Kong 1933 BehindTheVoiceActors Archived from the original on March 7 2022 Retrieved April 9 2021 Trumbore Dave September 19 2017 Transformers Peter Cullen and Frank Welker on the Evolution of Optimus Prime and Megatron Collider Archived from the original on January 31 2019 Retrieved January 30 2019 Peter Elliott is the voice of King Kong in King Kong Lives BehindTheVoiceActors Archived from the original on March 7 2022 Retrieved April 9 2021 Le Paul May 7 2020 Freaks of Nature Deep Rising Deserved Better As It Remains The Most Entertaining Aquatic Horror Movie Ever Nightmare on Fear Street Archived from the original on May 11 2020 Retrieved May 7 2020 Kurland Daniel April 12 2021 10 Kaiju Movies To Watch Before Godzilla vs Kong Comic Book Resources Archived from the original on April 14 2021 Retrieved April 12 2021 a b Voices of King Kong BehindTheVoiceActors Archived from the original on May 10 2021 Retrieved April 9 2021 Bringing Kong to Life Part 1 Motion Capture King Kong DVD Extras Archived from the original on May 12 2021 Retrieved April 12 2021 Seth Green is the voice of King Kong in The LEGO Batman Movie BehindTheVoiceActors Archived from the original on April 29 2021 Retrieved April 9 2021 Boland Michaela February 9 2009 Global Creatures takes on Kong Variety Retrieved March 4 2010 Gross Ed August 9 2017 Kong on the Planet of the Apes Exclusive First Look at the Comic Mini Series www empireonline com Empire Retrieved May 13 2022 The World of Kong A Natural History of Skull Island p 210 Archived August 4 2020 at the Wayback Machine Vaz 2005 pp 14 15 Getting That Monkey Off His Creator s Back The New York Times August 13 2005 Archived from the original on October 18 2018 Retrieved October 17 2018 Vaz 2005 pp 14 16 Vaz 2005 p 10 Vaz 2005 p 16 Vaz 2005 pp 16 17 King Kong 1933 Notes TCM Archived from the original on December 16 2019 Retrieved October 17 2018 Vaz 2005 p 167 Goldner amp Turner 1975 p 38 Vaz 2005 p 186 a b Vaz 2005 p 194 Vaz 2005 p 187 Van Hise 1993 p 56 Willis O Brien giant gorilla painting Archived from the original on February 2 2017 Retrieved August 10 2016 Willis O Brien Creator of the Impossible by Don Shay Cinefex 7 R B Graphics 1982 pg 33 a b c d e Goldner amp Turner 1975 p 56 Goldner amp Turner 1975 p 58 Paul A Woods King Kong Cometh Plexus Publishing Limited 2005 pg 27 Goldner amp Turner 1975 p 44 a b Morton 2005 pp 54 55 a b Vaz 2005 pp 193 194 Vaz 2005 p 190 Morton 2005 p 25 a b c Vaz 2005 p 220 Goldner amp Turner 1975 p 185 a b 1933 RKO Press Page Scan Archived from the original on April 3 2019 Retrieved April 3 2019 Goldner amp Turner 1975 p 37 Goldner amp Turner 1975 p 159 Van Hise 1993 p 66 Morton 2005 p 36 Karen Haber Kong Unbound Pocket Books 2005 pg 106 Morton 2005 p 205 Morton 2005 p 264 Weta Workshop The World of Kong A Natural History of Skull Island Pocket Books 2005 King Kong Building a Shrewder Ape Archived from the original on June 29 2009 Retrieved April 2 2009 Kong Sized kongskullislandmovie 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and Co Morton Ray 2005 King Kong The History of a Movie Icon Applause Theater and Cinema Books ISBN 1557836698 Ryfle Steve 1998 Japan s Favorite Mon Star The Unauthorized Biography of the Big G ECW Press ISBN 1 55022 348 8 Van Hise James 1993 Hot Blooded Dinosaur Movies Pioneer Books Vaz Mark Cotta 2005 Living Dangerously The Adventures of Merian C Cooper Creator of King Kong Villard ISBN 1 4000 6276 4 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to King Kong character Wikiquote has quotations related to King Kong The 1933 film King Kong at IMDb Official King Kong 2005 movie website The 2005 remake King Kong at IMDb King Kong series listing at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title King Kong amp oldid 1133956566, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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