King Kong (unmade Hammer film): Difference between revisions

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== History ==
== History ==
Hammer a British company, famous for its horror films from the 1950's onward. [[Ray Harryhausen]], [[Willis O'Brien]]'s assistant for stop-motion in several giant monster films, Jim Danforth and David Allen made test footage for the [[Empire State Building]] scene witch was later used in a 1972 Volkswagen Commercial. when Hammer approached [[RKO Pictures]] for the rights for King Kong but RKO had a policy called "the no remakes policy" for there monsters, witch shut down Hammer's project until the early 1970s when Hammer asked for the rights for King Kong once more but RKO still kept the policy leaving the project unmade.
Hammer a British company, famous for its horror films from the 1950's onward. [[Ray Harryhausen]], [[Willis O'Brien]]'s assistant for stop-motion in several giant monster films, Jim Danforth and David Allen made test footage for the [[Empire State Building]] scene witch was later used in a 1972 Volkswagen Commercial. when Hammer approached [[RKO Pictures]] for the rights for King Kong but RKO had a policy called "the no remakes policy" for there monsters, witch shut down Hammer's project until the early 1970s when Hammer asked for the rights for King Kong once more but RKO still kept the policy leaving the project unmade.
== Gallery ==
<gallery>
File:KKVolks411 9.jpg
File:KKVolks411 25.jpg
</gallery>


== References ==
== References ==

Revision as of 04:18, 13 March 2021

King Kong
No image available
Alternate titles Hammer's King Kong
Planned 1966-1970
Intended release 1966
Concept history King KongOne Million Years B.C.

King Kong is an unrealized King Kong film proposal conceived by Hammer.

History

Hammer a British company, famous for its horror films from the 1950's onward. Ray Harryhausen, Willis O'Brien's assistant for stop-motion in several giant monster films, Jim Danforth and David Allen made test footage for the Empire State Building scene witch was later used in a 1972 Volkswagen Commercial. when Hammer approached RKO Pictures for the rights for King Kong but RKO had a policy called "the no remakes policy" for there monsters, witch shut down Hammer's project until the early 1970s when Hammer asked for the rights for King Kong once more but RKO still kept the policy leaving the project unmade.

Gallery

References

This is a list of references for King Kong (unmade Hammer film). These citations are used to identify the reliable sources on which this article is based. These references appear inside articles in the form of superscript numbers, which look like this: [1]

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Unmade
Movie
Era Icon - King Kong.png