User:The Boy Who Cried Godzilla/Sandbox/Mighty Joe: Difference between revisions
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(people decided they needed the TV more than me :/) |
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|relationships =[[Jill Young]] (adoptive sister) | |relationships =[[Jill Young]] (adoptive sister) | ||
|created =[[Merian C. Cooper]] | |created =[[Merian C. Cooper]] | ||
|portrayed =John Alexander{{sup|[[Mighty Joe Young (1998 film)| | |portrayed =John Alexander{{sup|[[Mighty Joe Young (1998 film)|98]]}},<br>Verne Troyer{{sup|98 (infant)}} | ||
|debut =[[Mighty Joe Young (1949 film)|''Mighty Joe Young'' (1949)]] | |debut =[[Mighty Joe Young (1949 film)|''Mighty Joe Young'' (1949)]] | ||
|last =[[Mighty Joe Young (1998 film)|''Mighty Joe Young'' (1998)]] | |last =[[Mighty Joe Young (1998 film)|''Mighty Joe Young'' (1998)]] | ||
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==History== | ==History== | ||
===[[Mighty Joe Young (1949 film)|''Migthy Joe Young'' (1949)]]=== | ===[[Mighty Joe Young (1949 film)|''Migthy Joe Young'' (1949)]]=== | ||
Joe was an infant when he was traded for by a child named [[Jill Young]], who got him from some men passing by her father's farm in Africa. Jill took care of him as he grew, and in twelve years time he had grown larger than any other recorded gorilla. Despite his size and strength, he remained loyal to Jill and would listen to her commands. One day, six months after her father's passing, Joe wandered into a poacher's camp on Jill's land and he began trashing a cart holding one of their lions. A group of cowboys then came and tried to lasso him, and he began to fight them off. The leader of the men, [[Max O'Hara]] came to try and stop him, and Joe lifted him off of his horse, and was preparing to throw him from a short cliff when Jill arrived to call him off and to chase off the poachers. In reality, it had all been a misunderstanding, but when Joe returned to the farmhouse, he saw O'Hara admonishing Jill and two other men at a table and became angry. Jill quickly soothed him with bananas, and made arrangements for both she and Joe to become the stars of Max O'Hara's Golden Safari club in Hollywood, California. There, he hoisted a platform supporting Jill playing a grand piano one night, and bested numerous strong men in a tug-of-war. Despite this, by night Joe was forced to sleep in a small cell in the club's basement, where he quickly became disillusioned with showbusiness. One night after ten weeks of this, O'Hara had Joe dress as an organ grinder's monkey, and had patrons throw giant coins at him with the stipulation that if any got in Joe's collection cup, there would be free champagne for the whole club. Joe was not a fan of having things thrown at him, and when a group of rowdy, drunk, patrons threw a bottle at him, he became angry, and O'Hara cut the act short and reprimanding the men. Instead of leaving, the three men made their way backstage to Joe's cell and gave him two entire bottles of champagne before turning on him for not leaving any for them. One then burned Joe with his cigarette lighter, and the drunken Joe tore off his cell door and began to rampage. He burst back onto the stage as patrons fled before him, and broke the glass enclosure for the giant lions behind the bar before beating a number of them and throwing others across the venue. | |||
===[[Mighty Joe Young (1998 film)|''Mighty Joe Young'' (1998)]]=== | ===[[Mighty Joe Young (1998 film)|''Mighty Joe Young'' (1998)]]=== | ||
==Abilities== | ==Abilities== |
Revision as of 03:30, 23 January 2023
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Joseph "Joe" Young is a giant gorilla who first appeared in the 1949 RKO Pictures film Mighty Joe Young.
Appearance
To be added.
Origins
Joe is an unusually large western gorilla that came into the care of Jill Young, an American child living in Africa with her father in the 1949 film, and her mother in the 1998 remake.
Design
To be added.
History
Migthy Joe Young (1949)
Joe was an infant when he was traded for by a child named Jill Young, who got him from some men passing by her father's farm in Africa. Jill took care of him as he grew, and in twelve years time he had grown larger than any other recorded gorilla. Despite his size and strength, he remained loyal to Jill and would listen to her commands. One day, six months after her father's passing, Joe wandered into a poacher's camp on Jill's land and he began trashing a cart holding one of their lions. A group of cowboys then came and tried to lasso him, and he began to fight them off. The leader of the men, Max O'Hara came to try and stop him, and Joe lifted him off of his horse, and was preparing to throw him from a short cliff when Jill arrived to call him off and to chase off the poachers. In reality, it had all been a misunderstanding, but when Joe returned to the farmhouse, he saw O'Hara admonishing Jill and two other men at a table and became angry. Jill quickly soothed him with bananas, and made arrangements for both she and Joe to become the stars of Max O'Hara's Golden Safari club in Hollywood, California. There, he hoisted a platform supporting Jill playing a grand piano one night, and bested numerous strong men in a tug-of-war. Despite this, by night Joe was forced to sleep in a small cell in the club's basement, where he quickly became disillusioned with showbusiness. One night after ten weeks of this, O'Hara had Joe dress as an organ grinder's monkey, and had patrons throw giant coins at him with the stipulation that if any got in Joe's collection cup, there would be free champagne for the whole club. Joe was not a fan of having things thrown at him, and when a group of rowdy, drunk, patrons threw a bottle at him, he became angry, and O'Hara cut the act short and reprimanding the men. Instead of leaving, the three men made their way backstage to Joe's cell and gave him two entire bottles of champagne before turning on him for not leaving any for them. One then burned Joe with his cigarette lighter, and the drunken Joe tore off his cell door and began to rampage. He burst back onto the stage as patrons fled before him, and broke the glass enclosure for the giant lions behind the bar before beating a number of them and throwing others across the venue.
Mighty Joe Young (1998)
Abilities
Physical strength
To be added.
Sapience and intelligence
To be added.
Books
Mighty Joe Young (junior novelization)
To be added.
Mighty Joe Young (Golden Book)
To be added.
References
This is a list of references for The Boy Who Cried Godzilla/Sandbox/Mighty Joe. 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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