King Kong (1976) directed by John Guillermin
This lavish remake follows the general plot points of the 1932 classic: A ship of Americans go to legendary Skull Island and discover a primitive society there that worships a giant ape called Kong. The girl in their group is kidnapped, first by the natives who offer her to Kong, then by Kong who takes her deep into the island. A group from the ship pursues the ape and the girl, eventually bringing both back to the ship. They return to New York City where they plan to make a lot of money displaying Kong to amazed crowds. Kong busts free when he sees the girl being menaced. He kidnaps her yet again and heads for the tallest building in Manhattan, which he climbs, carrying the girl. Aerial combat brings down the big ape, who fatally falls to the ground, surrounded by awed crowds.
The 1932 film was set in contemporary times and followed a Hollywood producer who wanted to make the greatest action film ever. He took a common girl off the street to be his romantic lead. He had a secret map that led to Skull Island. The girl bonds a bit with the ape on the island which helps them to capture Kong, though it's really one of the sailors that rescues her and keeps her safe. The producer is excited about the Beauty and the Beast angle to the story which he features in his New York debut of Kong. Things go haywire, leading to the famous attack of the biplanes at the top of the Empire State Building. The movie ends with the producer pithily claiming that "It wasn't the planes that got him. It's Beauty that killed the Beast."
The remake is set in contemporary times, specifically the 1970s. So the producer is replaced with an oil magnate (Charles Grodin) who thinks there's cheap and plentiful oil on Skull Island. As he sets out on an oil tanker, Jack (Jeff Bridges) sneaks on board. Jack is a primate expert who has heard legends about a creature on the island. He's soon found out but a storm comes up. After the storm, a lone lifeboat comes alongside the ship, carrying an unconscious Dwan (Jessica Lange). She's a shallow socialite who gets stuck on the petroleum search. They land at the island where she eventually winds up being offered to Kong by the natives. Kong is very aggressive, even sexually pawing at her. When they get back to America, the oil magnate puts on a big production to introduce Kong, even aping the way the natives offered up Dwan (and yes, that is not a misspelling, she made her name that way to be distinctive). Kong breaks out of his unbreakable cage and eventually catches her and climbs the World Trade Center, where he is shot down by helicopters. He falls. The crowds gathered around the gigantic corpse are more or less silent at the tragic ending.
Unfortunately, the film leans too much into the 1970s setting. Where the ambitious Hollywood producer has a more universal quality about him, the oil exec is just smarmy and is the villainous embodiment of the unpopularity of gas prices in the 1970s. Dwan is free-spirited and superficial, a liberated woman who does not have enough self-respect to not be treated like a sex object by everybody. The boat crew is excited to have a female onboard. Jack makes some passes. Kong often leers at her, lending some credibility when the oil exec claims Kong tried to rape her on the island. The other big 1970s concern is environmentalism, with Jack spouting a lot of "don't wipe out the species" and "don't exploit the locals" jargon so popular then. At the end, Kong is wheeled out inside of a gigantic gas pump, both a humiliation and a tasteless exploitation by the evil gas company. It all looks a bit dated and silly at this point, fifty years later.
The Kong effects are mostly amazing and do hold up. His face is very expressive (more than just the leering) and he has a bit more personality in this film. Too bad he's a bad boy from the 1970s! The ending is very downbeat, without a pithy one-liner from anyone, just wallowing in the tragedy of Kong's demise. The environmental message is a downer, lacking the pithiness of the 1930s producer's take on the situation.
I don't regret watching this but I do think it is more a product of its times than a story for the ages. The good stuff is taken from the original film. The new stuff is so contemporary that it looks fifty years old.
Mildly recommended--if you are a Kong completist, you should check it out.














