The Story (continued)
Swept
down the river to the jungle, an exhausted Jack and Ann return through
the jungle with a much-angered Kong in quick pursuit. Night has come
back at the wall in the native village, where Denham waits for a
signal from Driscoll. Excitedly, sailor guards see the two running
toward the gate, and everyone greets them, grateful that they are
alive. They all start back for the safety of the ship:
Denham: Wait a minute. What about Kong?
Driscoll: Well, what about him?
Denham: We came here to get a moving picture, and we've found something
worth more than all the movies in the world.
Captain: What!
Denham: We've got those gas bombs. If we can capture him alive.
Driscoll: Why you're crazy! Besides that, he's on a cliff where a
whole army couldn't get at him.
Denham: Yeah, if he stays there. But we've got something he wants
(looking at Ann.)
Driscoll: Yep, something he won't get again.
Just then, a lookout up on the gate next to the giant
gong cries out: "Hey, look out. It's Kong. Kong's coming!" Ann
screams again. They try to keep the huge gate closed, bolted and
blocked - the gate that has kept Kong trapped inside the island for
so long. At the sound of the gong, the natives swarm from their huts
and join them to hold the gate against the giant ape. Kong pounds
repeatedly on it, and pushes with his entire weight thrown against
the door. As last, he breaks it down, and the doors swing open to
reveal the awesome brute. An enraged Kong attacks the village searching
for his blond beauty. [The village's native huts had been reused
from the film Bird of Paradise (1932).] He hurls an entire
hut at the fleeing natives and crushes everything in his path. A
screaming baby is rescued just before Kong would have crushed him
with his gargantuan foot. On a raised scaffolding, a small group
of villagers hurl their spears at him. In retaliation, Kong uproots
a small tree and clubs the leader from the platform. He grabs the
native on the ground with his hairy hand and chews on him in his
gaping mouth, biting him to death (one of a number of horrific scenes
removed by censors in the 1930s). Kong then smashes the platform
with three swift punches from his fist. More native huts are crushed,
and a few of the natives are trampled.
At the beach, Denham tosses one of his gas bombs that
explodes at the feet of the charging Kong. The Beast is staggered.
Exhibiting anthropomorphic mannerisms, Kong rubs his eyes, grasps
at his throat, struggles to crawl forward and then collapses unconscious
onto the ground. Denham enthusiastically orders his men to go to
the ship for anchor chains and tools "to build a raft and float
him to the ship." An opportunist, Denham explains their good
fortune, believing that they will become rich by charging audiences
to see their giant gorilla on New York's Broadway. Victoriously,
he proclaims:
Denham: Well, the whole world will pay to see this.
Captain: No chains will ever hold that.
Denham: We'll give him more than chains. He's always been King of
his world. But we'll teach him fear! We're millionaires, boys, I'll
share it with all of you. Why, in a few months, it'll be up in lights
on Broadway: 'Kong - the Eighth Wonder of the World!'
Kong
is brought back to "Jazz Age" New York on the S. S.
Venture to be put on display in a crowded Broadway theater, shown
in marquee lights:
"KING KONG EIGHTH WONDER OF THE WORLD, Carl Denham's Giant Monster." Kong
is a victim in civilization, far removed and transported away from
his familiar jungle environment. The curious crowds of the first-night
audience push into the huge auditorium, mentioning that tickets are
$20 apiece to see the prized trophy, and freak show attraction. One
of the audience members has misunderstood and believes a movie screening
is about to take place. But she is told that it is more of a "personal
appearance." Another individual speculates: "I hear it's
a kind of a gorilla." A female quips: "Gee, ain't we got
enough of them in New York?"
Just before unveiling Kong to his audience, a top-hatted,
tuxedoed Denham tells press reporters backstage to play up the Beauty
and the Beast angle on the story, because it was Ann that led the
beast back to the village. He also requests that they take their
first flash photos of Kong on stage after the curtain goes up. He
walks on stage in front of the curtain and with much showmanship,
addresses the audience about his "Eighth Wonder of the World" in
its world premiere:
Ladies and gentlemen, I'm here tonight to tell you
a very strange story - a story so strange that no one will believe
it - but, ladies and gentlemen, seeing is believing. And we - my
partners and I - have brought back the living proof of our adventure,
an adventure in which twelve of our party met horrible death. And
now, ladies and gentlemen, before I tell you any more, I'm going
to show you the greatest thing your eyes have ever beheld. He was
a King and a God in the world he knew, but now he comes to civilization,
merely a captive, on show to gratify your curiosity. Ladies
and gentlemen, look at Kong - the Eighth Wonder of the World!
The curtain rises to the amazed, black-tie audience,
and there is the giant Kong exhibited, standing chained to a large
steel-platformed structure. The metal structure's resemblance to
a crucifix is symbolically striking. Denham invites Jack and Ann,
now obviously in love, to come onstage. Denham introduces first Ann
and then Driscoll - they're now engaged to be married:
The bravest girl I have ever known...There the Beast.
And here the Beauty. She has lived through an experience no other
woman ever dreamed of. And she was saved from the very grasp of
Kong by her future husband. I want you to meet a very brave gentleman,
Mr. John Driscoll.
Denham then brings the press reporters on stage, to
give the audience the privilege of seeing the first photographs taken
of Kong and his captors. Kong struggles when he is startled and then
angered by a flood of flashbulb photographs. He also is stirred and
jealous of the sight of his beautiful prize - Ann, standing next
to Denham. Denham assures his panicking audience: "Don't be
alarmed ladies and gentlemen. Those chains are made of chrome steel." With
a second flurry of photographs and bursts of light from the flashes,
Denham warns them to stop: "Wait a minute. Hold on. He thinks
you're attacking the girl." Furious and anguished, Kong believes
the popping lights are guns being fired at his female love.
Kong roars in fury and breaks free of his chains to
protect and rescue Ann - first freeing his right arm and then the
rest of the manacles binding his other arm, waist, and ankles. Driscoll
grabs Ann's hand and helps her escape into the alley where they flee
into a nearby hotel, while the panic-stricken audience hysterically
stampedes and races for the exits. Kong smashes his way out of the
theatre, causing mass havoc. Crashing through the stage door, Kong
sees Ann and Driscoll enter the revolving doors of the hotel building
across the way. After a car crashes into the hotel entrance where
Ann and Driscoll have fled, the frustrated Kong kills the driver
of the car in his mouth. In his violent rampage and assault on Manhattan
[a symbolic, Depression-era attack by the impoverished victim on
Wall Street and its bankers and stock dealers?], he rips the marquee
from the hotel entrance and throws it into the crowds on the street.
After hearing a scream and seeing a woman peering down
from a window, he scales the tall hotel building. Kong's great eyes
peer through a window searching for Ann. He reaches into the window
of the room and grabs a sleeping woman from her bed. When he discovers
she isn't the object of his affection, he opens the fingers of his
hand and drops her headlong to her death on the street far below.
Then he peeps through another window and glimpses Ann and Driscoll
in another room higher up in the hotel skyscraper. He crashes through
the window with his giant arm and Driscoll is knocked out defending
Ann. Then Kong plucks her from the bed in the bedroom and recaptures
her. He carries her to the roof, but then descends soon after, before
Denham and Driscoll can stop him.
On
his way, after being startled by the sight of a passing elevated
train on Third Avenue - thinking it is some gigantic snake - he tears
up the track as a second train approaches, causing the second train
to turn over and crash. Kong further damages the train (killing and
injuring more passengers) by destroying one of its cars with his
fists. A radio report details Kong's progress - he carries her across
New York City in his giant hand and makes his way for the city's
tallest point or "tree", the Empire State Building, possibly
because it reminds him of his mountaintop lair on Skull Island. Denham
thinks they're defeated:
Denham: That licks us.
Driscoll: There's one thing we haven't thought of.
Police Officer: What?
Driscoll: Airplanes. If he should put Ann down, and they could fly
close enough to pick him off without hitting her...
Police Officer: You're right, planes...
Four Navy biplanes are dispatched, each with fore and
aft machine guns mounted on them. They approach the Empire State
Building at sunrise, just as Kong is nearing the domed summit for
a tryst with his Beauty.
The film's final moments contain some of the most familiar
and memorable of all images and sequences in film history. Atop the
building, Kong clutches the girl whose blonde beauty touched his
heart. He places Ann on a ledge and then roars in defiance at the
planes. A squadron of fighter biplanes swirl around him in an attack
to shoot him down, as he swats at them like irritating mosquitoes
or bees, but he cannot reach them. His battle against the biplanes
is futile. [Note: The film's producers and directors, Cooper and
Schoedsack, played the roles of pilot and gunner in this plane-attack
scene.]
Kong flinches as machine gun bullets rip into his body.
Kong sends one careless pilot to a fiery death. After a vicious attack
into his throat and body, he is weakened and knows that he is dying.
He touches his chest, and then looks at the blood on his fingers
from a chest wound. He wipes his forehead with the back of his hand.
He gently picks Ann up one last time to gaze at her with tender affection
and love. Then, he returns her to the ledge and strokes her gently
with his fingertips. After another volley of bullets into his throat,
his head droops and his body sways and staggers - he is barely able
to hold on. When he loosens his hold from the building, he silently
plunges to his death on the street below. Tragically, Kong is no
longer an object of terror and fear, but of pity. Moments later,
Ann is rescued by Jack Driscoll on the Empire State Dome. He embraces
his fiancee tightly in his arms: "Ann, Ann, hang on, dear."
In the final scene on the street's pavement below,
next to Kong's lifeless body that is sprawled there with blood trickling
from his mouth, Denham pushes his way through the police cordon to
examine the massive, crushed body of the fallen monster: "Let
me through, officer, my name's Denham...Lieutenant, I'm Carl Denham." He
corrects the police officer lieutenant who claims he knows what killed
Kong. Rather than the 'airplanes' - a symbol of civilization, Denham
states what finally 'killed the Beast.' He shakes his head and replies
with relish, in a classic line, the final line of the film:
Police Officer Lieutenant: Well, Denham, the airplanes
got him.
Denham: Oh, no. It wasn't the airplanes. It was Beauty killed
the Beast.
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