A Model Monster : King Kong

Posted by: Craig Woolheater on December 8th, 2005

King Kong battles the dinosaur

King Kong battles the dinosaur in 1933 original film.

With the opening of the new King Kong movie directed by Peter Jackson just a week away, the giant ape seems to be everywhere. Kiss of the Beast, a show featuring more than 15 Kong movies, runs through December 18 at the Federation Square’s Australian Centre for the Moving Image in Melbourne.

The exhibition Kiss of the Beast – Gorillas, Wild Beasts and Monsters in Art and Film features some 100 works, including film and the moving image, posters, sculptures, paintings, prints and rare books, and a film program opened in Brisbane at the Queensland Art Gallery on November 16. The exhibit minus the film program will remain on display at the museum until January 22.

Kathryn Weir, head of cinema at the Queensland Art Gallery, says: “It’s been a wild ride researching and preparing the exhibition and arranging the film program. Dr Ted Gott (her co-curator, senior curator of international art at the National Gallery of Victoria) and I put the proposal together late last year, and it was accepted by the gallery early this year. This scale of exhibition usually involves three years of preparation.”

“King Kong’s most enduring leitmotif is the fair maiden, helpless in the clutches of the monstrous, aggressive gorilla,” the exhibition catalogue notes. “It goes without saying the confrontation between Kong and Fay Wray is what makes the movie.

“It was beauty killed the beast,” says Weir, quoting the famous last line of the classic.

“While Kiss of the Beast arrives from Brisbane without the attendant exhibition curated by the National Gallery of Victoria’s Ted Gott (ACMI is hosting the Stanley Kubrick exhibition until January 29), it remains a diverse assembly of titles that puts King Kong in a thematic framework, placing the Beauty and the Beast myth alongside Darwin’s theory of evolution.”

Myself, being a Godzilla fan from way back, I prefer King Kong vs Godzilla from 1962. That may change next week though…Anyone else planning to see the new one?

Mighty Peking Man

A 1977 Hong Kong reworking, Mighty Peking Man.

About Craig Woolheater
Co-founder of Cryptomundo in 2005. I have appeared in or contributed to the following TV programs, documentaries and films: OLN's Mysterious Encounters: "Caddo Critter", Southern Fried Bigfoot, Travel Channel's Weird Travels: "Bigfoot", History Channel's MonsterQuest: "Swamp Stalker", The Wild Man of the Navidad, Destination America's Monsters and Mysteries in America: Texas Terror - Lake Worth Monster, Animal Planet's Finding Bigfoot: Return to Boggy Creek and Beast of the Bayou.


One Response to “A Model Monster : King Kong”

  1. Stephen Penton responds:

    Well if you read up King Kong comes from the giant apes that use to live in the bambo forest of the oreint and this was long before the suposible exsitance of man (even though they have resint’y escvated a full human sketlian the predates Lucy) so the event of a kingo kong fighting a surviving dinosaur species is not undoubtable infact it is quit possible that a human or prehuman saw it and it was probly a thing like the dragon some one told about it sooner or later it the kong became bigger untill know it is what it is the dragon as probly a rex that sooner or later grew wingfs and could fly then even later could breath fire and then even later ate human lesh instead of live stock so king kong was real just not like 40 storys tall (thats Godzilas hight and kong was just as big) probly only like 10 feet then he became biger and bigger and is ow a giant

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