I wonder if the new King Kong film will have the famously deleted scene from the first two versions, in which as Kong climbs the Empire State Building just as he reaches the top a women 7 floors below is on the phone to the building supervisor saying, " You'll never guess what's pocking through my window"
;-)
I know I'm sick of remakes, and I refuse to spend a single cent on utter shit like King Kong or most any other new movie out there. I do want to see Walk the Line, has anyone seen it?
Togg wrote: I wonder if the new King Kong film will have the famously deleted scene from the first two versions, in which as Kong climbs the Empire State Building just as he reaches the top a women 7 floors below is on the phone to the building supervisor saying, " You'll never guess what's pocking through my window"
;-)
LOL ;-)
I saw clips of the 1933 movie, looked pretty scary and well made for the time
The video game is looking better than the film has amazing graphics!
teleman wrote: Wasn't the original title based on a typo? I thought Kong was supposed to be Dong. Or was that a 70s porn video?
The game 'Donkey Kong' was based on a typo.
Back in the early 80s when Nintendo developed the game in Japan, the person in charge of marketing asked what the game was supossed to be called. The name was to be called 'Monkey Kong', but apparently he misheard it for 'Donkey Kong'. By the time they realized that there was a typo, Nintendo had already manufactured that whole retail package for the game, and they decided to release it as it is.
Not in the NEW remake, but, in the REISSUE/Rstored/Remastered DVD of the ORIGINAL 1933 King Kong,....
I have read that one deleted/censored scene and one scene that had to be restored due to it the original celluloid being partially destroyed WILL be in there.
The deleted/censored scene is actress Fay Wray in her dress, and Kong first see her, and tickles her, removes her dress.
The restored scene is the ship's crew fighting a GIANT spider, with the special effects magic of the GREAT Willis O'Brien who created the animation stop motion in the 1933 version of Kong, as well as Mighty Joe Young and Silent version of The Lost World.