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Son of Kong (1933)

Son of Kong (1933)
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Hoping to immediately cash in on its blockbuster hit King Kong (1933). RKO Radio commissioned producers Willis O'Brien and Ernest B. Schoedsack to hastily slap together a sequel. Son of Kong begins where King Kong left off, with foolhardy entrepreneur Carl Denham (Robert Armstrong) facing hundreds of thousands dollars in lawsuits from the damages inflicted by the mighty Kong on the city of New York (remember?) Denham's partner Captain Englehorn (Frank Reicher) suggests that they escape to Malaya, where they make the acquaintance of Hilda (Helen Mack), the daughter of drink-besotted circus-owner Peterson (Clarence Wilson). When her father is killed in a fire caused by Norwegian sea captain Helstrom (John Marston), Hilda is comforted by Denham, who has taken a liking to the unfortunate girl. It turns out that Helstrom was the sailor who sold Denham the map to Skull Island, where King Kong once ruled unchecked. Hoping to escape prosecution for the fatal fire, Hellstrom claims that there's a fabulous treasure buried somewhere on Skull Island and offers to lead Denham and Englehorn back to the Pacific flyspeck. With no place else to go, Hilda stows away on Englehorn's boat and joins the expedition. After an unpleasant confrontation with the natives whom Kong trampled and chewed up in the earlier film, Denham and Hilda explore another part of the Island -- and there they find Little Kong, a 12-foot-high white gorilla who is as lovable as his "old man" was nasty. As the treacherous Hellstrom meets his doom elsewhere on the island, cute Little Kong protects his new friends Denham and Hilda from a variety of marauding dinosaurs, ultimately sacrificing his own life to save the human hero and heroine from a native war party. Largely played for laughs (at one point Little Kong makes an "Oy vey" gesture, as the soundtrack plays a snatch of a Jewish dance!), Son of Kong is nowhere near the classic stature of its illustrious predecessor. On the other hand, the stop-motion photography is quite impressive, at times even better than the animation seen in the original King Kong. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

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Starring:
Robert ArmstrongHelen Mack, (more)
Director(s):
Ernest B. Schoedsack
Theatrical MPAA Rating:
NR
Format(s):
DVD
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Synopsis of Son of Kong

Hoping to immediately cash in on its blockbuster hit King Kong (1933). RKO Radio commissioned producers Willis O'Brien and Ernest B. Schoedsack to hastily slap together a sequel. Son of Kong begins where King Kong left off, with foolhardy entrepreneur Carl Denham (Robert Armstrong) facing hundreds of thousands dollars in lawsuits from the damages inflicted by the mighty Kong on the city of New York (remember?) Denham's partner Captain Englehorn (Frank Reicher) suggests that they escape to Malaya, where they make the acquaintance of Hilda (Helen Mack), the daughter of drink-besotted circus-owner Peterson (Clarence Wilson). When her father is killed in a fire caused by Norwegian sea captain Helstrom (John Marston), Hilda is comforted by Denham, who has taken a liking to the unfortunate girl. It turns out that Helstrom was the sailor who sold Denham the map to Skull Island, where King Kong once ruled unchecked. Hoping to escape prosecution for the fatal fire, Hellstrom claims that there's a fabulous treasure buried somewhere on Skull Island and offers to lead Denham and Englehorn back to the Pacific flyspeck. With no place else to go, Hilda stows away on Englehorn's boat and joins the expedition. After an unpleasant confrontation with the natives whom Kong trampled and chewed up in the earlier film, Denham and Hilda explore another part of the Island -- and there they find Little Kong, a 12-foot-high white gorilla who is as lovable as his "old man" was nasty. As the treacherous Hellstrom meets his doom elsewhere on the island, cute Little Kong protects his new friends Denham and Hilda from a variety of marauding dinosaurs, ultimately sacrificing his own life to save the human hero and heroine from a native war party. Largely played for laughs (at one point Little Kong makes an "Oy vey" gesture, as the soundtrack plays a snatch of a Jewish dance!), Son of Kong is nowhere near the classic stature of its illustrious predecessor. On the other hand, the stop-motion photography is quite impressive, at times even better than the animation seen in the original King Kong. ~ Hal Erickson, Rovi

Theatrical Feature Running Time:
69 mins

Complete Cast of Son of Kong


Director(s):
Ernest B. Schoedsack
Writer(s):
Ruth Rose
Producer(s):
Archie MarshekArchie S. Marshek
Theatrical MPAA Rating:
NR(Suitable for Children)
Categories:
Comedy
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    Member Reviews
     
    Mary G.

    this movie was a o.k. sequel because it sort of held on to the ideas of the first movie.You can live with out seeing it,but it is fun to see.

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    Peggy P.

    awful sequel, the son is nothing like his dad, boring, rushed story and nothing to it, king kong is great but you wont be missing anything by avoiding this.

    Yes   |   No

     
    James S.

    Rushed into production to take advantage of the public craze for Kong, "Son of Kong" finds Carl Denham facing a stack of lawsuits nearly as high as the Empire State Building over the ape's Manhattan rampage. He lights out for the South Seas and winds up again on Skull Island, this time in pursuit of a fabled treasure. Of course, he picks up another damsel to be distressed (Helen Mack) along the way, and they eventually met up with an albino adolescent version of the mighty Kong. (I'm not sure where Mrs. Kong got off to, but nevermind.) The cast again features Robert Armstrong as Denham, but the film is, well, pretty cheesy, though in an enjoyable way. Mercifully short (69 minutes) and set to a lot Max Steiner music recycled from the first film, the movie slips by so quickly you barely notice how threadbare it is. Willis O'Brien worked on the special effects but there are fewer of them and less well done. Little Kong, though, is delight - a lighter, comic version of dad.

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