Product Details
King Kong (2 Disc Special Edition) [DVD] [2005]

King Kong (2 Disc Special Edition) [DVD] [2005]
Directed by Peter Jackson

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Average customer review:
In 1933 New York, an overly ambitious movie producer coerces his cast and hired ship crew to travel to mysterious Skull Island.

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #13746 in DVD
  • Released on: 2006-04-10
  • Rating: Suitable for 12 years and over
  • Aspect ratio: 2.35:1
  • Formats: Anamorphic, Box set, PAL, Special Edition
  • Original language: English
  • Subtitled in: Arabic, Icelandic
  • Number of discs: 2
  • Running time: 179 minutes

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.co.uk Review
Movies don't come any bigger than Peter Jackson's King Kong, a three-hour remake of the 1933 classic that marries breathtaking visual prowess with a surprising emotional depth. Expanding on the original story of the blonde beauty and the beast who falls for her, Jackson creates a movie spectacle that matches his Lord of the Rings films and even at times evokes their fantasy world while celebrating the glory of '30s Hollywood. Naomi Watts stars as Ann Darrow, a vaudeville actress down on her luck in Depression-era New York until manic filmmaker Carl Denham (a game but miscast Jack Black) entices her with a lead role. Dazzled by the genius of screenwriter Jack Driscoll (Adrien Brody), Ann boards the tramp steamer S.S. Venture, which she--and most of the wary crew--believes is headed for Singapore. Denham, however, is in search of the mythic Skull Island, hoping to capture its wonders on film and make a fortune. What he didn't count on were some scary natives who find that the comely Darrow looks like prime sacrifice material for a mysterious giant creature....

There's no point in rehashing the entire plot, as every movie aficionado is more than familiar with the trajectory of King Kong; the challenge facing Jackson, his screenwriters, and the phenomenal visual-effects team was to breathe new life into an old, familiar story. To that degree, they achieve what could be best called a qualified success. Though they've assembled a crackerjack supporting cast, including Thomas Kretschmann as the Venture's hard-bitten captain and young Jamie Bell as a plucky crewman, the first third of the movie is rather labored, with too much minute detail given over to sumptuous re-creations of '30s New York and the unexciting initial leg of the Venture's sea voyage. However, once the film finds its way to Skull Island (which bears more than a passing resemblance to LOTR's Mordor), Kong turns into a dazzling movie triumph, by turns terrifying and awe-inspiring. The choreography and execution of the action set pieces--including one involving Kong and a trio of Tyrannosaurus Rexes, as well as another that could be charitably described as a bug-phobic's nightmare--is nothing short of landmark filmmaking, and a certain Mr. Spielberg should watch his back, as Kong trumps most anything that has come before it.

Despite the visual challenges of King Kong, the movie's most difficult hurdle is the budding romance between Ann and her simian soulmate. Happily, this is where Jackson unqualifiedly triumphs, as this unorthodox love story is tenderly and humorously drawn, by turns sympathetic and wondrous. Watts, whose accessibility balances out her almost otherworldly loveliness, works wonders with mere glances, and Andy Serkis, who digitally embodies Kong here much as he did Gollum in the LOTR films, breathes vibrant life into the giant star of the film without ever overplaying any emotions. The final, tragic act of the film, set mostly atop the Empire State Building, is where Kong earns its place in movie history as a work that celebrates both the technical and emotional heights that film can reach. --Mark Englehart, Amazon.com

Synopsis
Despite his origins as a low-budget filmmaker with a taste for the unsavoury side of life, Peter Jackson has turned into an event filmmaker someone who can conjure up a movie on a scale unlike anything we've seen before. KING KONG is his sprawling, epic remake of Merian C. Cooper and Ernest B. Schoedsack's 1933 movie of the same name, and it is as big as the gorilla that runs riot through Jackson's rendering of Depression-era New York. Keeping the simple yet effective plot intact a film crew travels to the mysterious Skull Island, picks up Kong, and brings him back to New York City Jackson expands on this basic premise by drawing on the jaw-dropping talents of his special effects team to satisfy his thirst for the grand spectacle. The movie posits Naomi Watts as Ann Darrow, the starry-eyed blonde beauty whom Kong falls for; Jack Black as Carl Denham, a low-rent Orson Welles look-alike who drags the crew to the island to make his movie; and Adrian Brody as Jack Driscoll, a hack playwright who battles Kong both physically and for Darrow's heart. As the men struggle against Kong and the lumbering dinosaurs of Skull Island, Andy Serkis, who made the character of Gollum so believable in the Lord of the Rings trilogy, steps in to form the facial features of the mighty gorilla, lending a real emotional sucker-punch to the scenes between Darrow and Kong. But it's the final third of the movie where Jackson really delivers; his 1930s New York is stunning, and when Kong breaks free from his shackles and stampedes on a lovelorn trek through the city, then iconically climbs the Empire State Building with his sweetheart, it's impossible to not be swept away by the sheer beauty and sadness of the moment. While its three-hour length may prove daunting to some, the payoff in Jackson's KING KONG is ultimately worth it, proving once again that he is a director of breathtaking vision.


Customer Reviews

Better than expected....5
I must admit, when I saw this at the cinema I wasn't what you would call excited... In fact we only saw Kong as the film we went to see was not on!
But I was sooo wrong. I was absolutely blown away from start to finish. It is beautifully directed and shot and I love Jack Black in this film. Naomi Watts was perfect in her role, she has the doey eyed look of a female in distress down to a tee.
I know some people must be thinking "It's just another re-make" and I thought that at first but honestly, this is a moving, exciting and thrilling re-make. Most probably the best re-make I have ever seen. Three hours flew by and I wanted the film to go on....
Peter Jackson shows his strengths in this feature and I hope he carries on making pictures as truly wonderful as this.

Suspend disbelief and enjoy4
It's a ridiculous story but the film is very well made, the actors are excellent, the special effects are astonishing, you can actually hear and understand the dialogue which isn't drowned out by the music and sound effects. I didn't expect to enjoy it much at all, but managed to suspend my disbelief for the whole 3 hours - even through the scenes with the unfeasibly huge arthropods - and enjoyed it quite a lot. The actor who gets a particularly generous dollop of my admiration is the talented Andy Serkis, who played 2 roles: Lumpy (the sailor who looks a bit like Popeye) and the motion capture element of the big fella himself, King Kong. What a performance: a lot of hard work and no time for monkeying around. The bonus features are worth a look too, but had disappointingly little to say about the natives of Skull Island. Those strange folk were the most terrifying thing in the film. They were far more scary than the big cuddly gorilla or the dinosaurs or the impossibly large creepy-crawlies (some of which looked like wetas by the way - a cute reference to Weta Workshop Effects possibly). I wanted to know what had happened to their eyes and why they were all sporting the uncomfortably mutilated look. But never mind. They and their pitiful condition made as much sense as the rest of the film. It all works just fine and will carry you along on the crest its wave, just so long as you don't try to pick it apart looking for logic.

It was beauty that killed the beast5
I have never seen the original King Kong, and had the big misfortune of being introduced to it through the 1970s remake of it which looks really dated now and had very unremarkable acting. But I like monster movies, so I thought I'd go and see this one. I can honestly say this is the best movie of 2005. First class performances by the cast and excellent special effects combined with a dynamite script make it unmissable.

A heartwarming love story and a sprawling action epic in one hairy package. Superbly designed this film's only downfall is perhaps its length, coming in at over 3 hours long. But every minute is worth watching and it is filled to the brim with quality storytelling and intricate action setpieces. Too much of a good thing? Not at all, Kong is heart-pounding, tear jerking adventure that never fails to entertain.