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King Kong (1933 film)

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King Kong is a classic 1933 Hollywood horror/adventure film about a gigantic prehistoric gorilla, brought from a remote island to New York City to be exhibited as a natural wonder, that escapes to cause mass destruction. The film is notable for Willis O'Brien's stop-motion animation, Max Steiner's musical score, and actress Fay Wray's performance as the ape's improbable love interest. In the finale, which has become an enduring pop icon, Kong is gunned-down from atop the Empire State Building by a swarm of Army biplanes. King Kong premiered in New York City on March 2, 1933.

A sequel, Son of Kong, was also released in 1933. The story concerned a return expedition to Skull Island discovers that the King has left behind an albino son.

The premise of a gaint gorilla brought to the United States for entertainment purposes and wreaking havoc was recycled in Mighty Joe Young, (1949, 1998), but was itself similar to that of an earlier O'Brien effort, The Lost World (1925), in which a brontosaurus rampages through London.

King Kong also appeared in two Japanese kaiju films: King Kong vs Godzilla and King Kong Escapes.

In 1978, King Kong was remade. Jessica Lange and Jeff Bridges starred. A sequel, King Kong Lives, starring Linda Hamilton, followed a decade later. In 2003, Universal Pictures planned another remake with Peter Jackson directing.

The original, 1933 version has been selected for preservation in the United States National Film Registry.