Jackson’s unique vision makes ‘Kong’ king
Three-hour remake — a faithful homage to '33 original — never loses steam
![]() Reuters Modern special effects — and director Peter Jackson's vision — bring King Kong to life in his new three-hour remake. |
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Running seven minutes past three hours, Peter Jackson’s blockbuster remake of “King Kong” is nearly twice as long as the 1933 original. In this case, fortunately, more really is more. Instead of bloat, it offers a boldly personal re-imagining of a fantasy classic.
The movie somehow manages to be both intensely faithful to the first film and a witty, muscular commentary on it. This is, above all, Jackson’s “King Kong,” a labor of love that asks the audience to see the story through his eyes. No other filmmaker could or would do what he has done with the material.
He’s kept the basic story, about an obsessed 1930s filmmaker-adventurer, Carl Denham (Jack Black in devilish con-man mode), who hires a blonde victim of the Depression, Ann Darrow (an inspired Naomi Watts), to perform in his latest movie, which will be shot on the godforsaken Skull Island.
The fear-driven natives capture Ann and sacrifice her to a giant ape (once dubbed “the tallest, darkest leading man in Hollywood”), who falls for her and does battle with various dinosaurs and her boyfriend, Jack Driscoll (Adrien Brody). Eventually Kong is subdued and taken to New York, where he’s promoted as “the eighth wonder of the world.” He promptly rips off his chains and tears the city apart.
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Watts’ Ann rides a dinosaur like a rodeo star, shows off a Tarzan-like ability to swing through the jungle on conveniently placed vines, and demonstrates her independence from Denham by refusing to exploit Kong. Andy Serkis, who played Gollum in Jackson’s “Lord of the Rings” trilogy, provides body language for Kong that is more convincing and much smoother than the stop-motion puppet of the original.
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Although Jackson’s version is rated PG-13, it’s clearly the work of the same filmmaker who made the 1992 New Zealand horror show, “Dead/Alive,” which was rated NC-17 for its abundant gore. Yet for every nightmarish gross-out in “Kong,” there’s a funny or tender moment that suggests how much he’s matured as an artist since then.
It may take the form of an affectionate acknowledgment of the first film (Max Steiner’s 1933 score turns up in an amusingly different context), or an understanding look between Ann and Kong, or a loaded discussion of Joseph Conrad’s “Heart of Darkness” as the voyagers approach Skull Island. Even at this length, Jackson’s movie never runs out of ideas.
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