The Mighty Kong

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Animated King Kong films
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The Mighty Kong
Kong: King of Atlantis
The Mighty Kong
The Mighty Kong
Directed by Art Scott
Producer Denis deVallance,
Lyn Henderson
Written by William J. Keenan
Music by Richard M. Sherman,
Robert B. Sherman (songs), David Siebels
Distributor Warner Home Video (1998),
Rating G
Running time 73 minutes
(1 hour, 13 minutes)
Aspect ratio 16:9
Rate this film!
1.70
(27 votes)

The Mighty Kong is a 1998 American animated musical adaptation of King Kong. It was animated by Jade Animation, Anirom Animation, Rainbow Korea Animation, and Hahn Shin Corporation. Legacy Releasing gave it an extremely limited U.S. theatrical run on May 29, 1998, and Warner Home Video released it on VHS on June 16, 1998.

Plot

After cancelling his stage show Wild Animal Follies to pursue a film project, famous director C.B. Denham takes to the streets to find a lead actress. He discovers Ann Darrow attempting to steal an apple from a merchant. He has his assistant Roscoe buy her out and takes her to dinner where he entices her in song to sign on to his film crew so as to gain fame and fortune and the ability to live in Hollywood. On the ship the Java Queen, she encounters a cabin boy called Ricky and his monkey Chips, who are ordered off the decks by Jack Driscoll after nearly being crushed by falling cargo. In Ann's cabin, she begins to doubt her desire to become a movie star, but Ricky reminds her that she has nothing to lose by trying. Below decks, one of the sailors claims the stock of arms brought aboard with Denham are justified as they are going to an island that the ship had drifted to some time previously. While Ricky is ill, Ann takes the dinner cart to the cabin, where Driscoll belittles her for her being a jinx on the ship. She dumps clam chowder on his head and storms out, much to Denham and the captain's amusement. The next day, while filming test footage, Ann dreams of an island paradise. After six weeks at sea, the ship arrives at the location marked on Denham's maps, but before sailing south for Skull Island, The Captain arranges for the crew to vote on the voyage. Denham offers them bonuses and their names in his film's credits and they agree. They then arrive at Skull Island, where they find natives in the midst of a religious ceremony. Despite having mentioned knowing of a Monkey Cult on the island, Denham does not know the meaning of the word "Kong" in the native chant. Despite the Captain's warning, Denham starts filming, and accidentally knocks his cameraman into the ceremony. The Captain talks them out of immediate danger, but the islanders become intent on capturing Ann. Driscoll gives Ann his jacket, and that night on the ship decide they are in love. Ann is then kidnapped by the Skull Islanders, Ricky discovers she is not on board, and an armed search party goes ashore to find her. Ricky and Chips follow afterward. The party sees Ann bound between two posts and being wheeled up a mountain, where Kong takes her away. Driscoll finds a tunnel that leads into the island, and evades a Triceratops. Kong carries Ann away, but they are attacked by a Tyrannosaurus rex, which Kong quickly defeats. Kong takes Ann to his volcano lair, where he douses her in water from a waterfall and throws her in a pool before drying her off with his breath. They are then attacked by Pteranodons and a Giant Snake. While Kong is occupied, Driscoll takes Ann away and they jump into a river teeming with crocodiles. In an attempt to escape a rockslide, Denham and his cameraman bungee jump off of the cliff with film strips. Ricky and Chips find them, but Denham cannot walk. Ricky and Driscoll save Denham, but are discovered by Kong. He incapacitates him with gas bombs, and the Captain attempts to leave without Kong, Denham, Ann, and Driscoll implore him to take him. Denham gives an idea to transport him, and later uses him to become the star of his latest stage show: The Mighty Kong. Ann and the rest of the crew work in the show, but Ann is devastated to see the noble Kong in chains. Denham consoles her by claiming that the show's procedes will go to a thousand acres in south New Jersey for Kong to roam free in. Unfortunately, the flash from the press's cameras upset Kong, as they make him believe Ann is in danger, and he breaks free. Ann and Jack flee the scene, and Kong breaks out of the theater and begins to roam New York City in search of Ann. During his search, Kong picks up and eats the produce stand that Ann once tried to steal an apple from. He eventually finds Ann's jacket on the sidewalk outside her hotel, reaches into her room, and grabs her. They are attacked by tanks, and so to escape them Kong climbs the Empire State Building, where they are attacked by airplanes. Kong lays Ann down, but she rolls over and falls off the building. Luckily, she grabs the railing of an observation deck, and survives. When the planes were all downed, Denham's idea to capture Kong was attempted, and two blimps with a cargo net strung between them fly over to Kong. Kong is captured in the net, but his weight causes it to tear apart. Ann then slips, but is caught by Driscoll who had been climbing the building's stairs to rescue Ann. Carl gives his line about Beauty killing the Beast, but Chips and Ricky discover that Kong is alive.

Staff

Staff role on the left, staff member's name on the right.

  • Directed by   Art Scott
  • Written by   William J. Keenan
  • Executive producers   George W. Drysdale, Koichi Motohashi
  • Produced by   Denis deVallance, Lyn Henderson
  • Music by   David Siebels, Robert B. Sherman and Richard M. Sherman (songs)
  • Edited by   Tony Hayman
  • Production design by   Brendan DeVallance, Lyn Henderson
  • Special effects by   Kevin Oakley

Cast

Actor's name on the left, character played on the right.

  • Dudley Moore   as   C.B. Denham / King Kong
  • Jodi Benson   as   Ann Darrow
  • Randy Hamilton   as   Jack Driscoll
  • William Sage   as   Roscoe
  • Jason Gray-Stanford   as   Ricky
  • Richard Newman   as   Captain
  • Don Brown   as   Additional Voices
  • Ian James Corlett, Michael Dobson, Paul Dobson   as   Additional voices

Appearances

Monsters

Video releases

Warner Bros. VHS (1998)

  • Tapes: 1
  • Audio: English
  • Notes: Cropped to 1.33:1.

Tricoast Entertainment DVD (2019)

  • Region: N/A
  • Discs: 1
  • Audio: English
  • Subtitles: To be determined
  • Special Features: To be determined

Trivia

  • Though largely a remake of the original King Kong, the film also includes a version of the waterfall shower scene from the 1976 remake. In addition, Kong battles a giant snake in one scene and Ann Darrow begins to sympathize with Kong throughout her captivity, both elements featured in the 1976 remake.
  • The Mighty Kong was Dudley Moore's last film.
  • This is the first American King Kong film in which the title character survives the end of the movie.
  • While classified as an animated film, there is one shot with live-action footage: during the "Dolly of Popalliali" sequence, animated sea foam and seals are superimposed over real water.

Comments

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