This movie was the most profitable of the Godzilla series. He battles King Kong, the Eighth Wonder of the World. The battle is like one between a wrestling match. The crunching and crushing of buildings are a work of special effects genius by Eiji Tsuburaya and Akira Ifukube gave a moving and super music score, introducing one of his familiar Godzilla themes that would be later heard in the many Godzilla movies that follow.
Ishiro Honda had solid and visionary direction and Shinichi Sekizawa gave a funny and lighthearted script. The two lead actresses in this movie, Mie Hama and Akiko Wakabayashi, also starred as the Bond Girls in the James Bond movie "You Only Live Twice." Mie Hama plays Fumiko who became King Kong's love-at-first-sight (you get the idea what happens when Kong sees her).
Overall, this is an awesome movie with memorable characters, exciting monster battles, a solid plot and rousing music. The downside is that I wished the costume used for Kong would be a bit more serviceable; the suit is pretty hideous. And, I wished there was a little more city-stomping action.
This American version of this movie is sold in stores in the USA. There are American inserts with American actors, which actually contributed to the storyline. But, many scenes from the original film are cut, as is most of Ifukube's score. I have both the Japanese and American versions. If you want the complete story with the original plot and music with no unnecessary inserts and stock music, stay with the Japanese versions with English subtitles (if you can find it sold somewhere).
Grade B+
King Kong vs. Godzilla
1963
Action / Adventure / Comedy / Fantasy / Sci-Fi
King Kong vs. Godzilla
1963
Action / Adventure / Comedy / Fantasy / Sci-Fi
Plot summary
(Re-edited US Version) Eric Carter, a reporter for the United Nations, reports on a submarine which collides with an iceberg and frees Godzilla. The news of this soon leads to Mr. Tako, the chairman of a pharmaceutical company, to seek a monster of his own to generate publicity. He sends out an expedition to Farou Island where they discover the god of the island in the form of King Kong. The giant ape is capture and returned to Japan, upon which it escapes and heads off on a collision course straight towards Godzilla. The two rivals soon clash in a giant climatic battle.
Uploaded by: FREEMAN
Director
Top cast
Tech specs
720p.BLU 1080p.BLUMovie Reviews
One of the Battle of the Centuries!
King Kong turns Japanese
Before Freddy VS Jason, before Aliens VS Predator, even before the clash of the titans that is Puppet Master VS Demonic Toys (but after Frankenstein Meets The Wolf Man, obviously),there was King Kong VS Godzilla.
Before I proceed with this review, I should point out that the version I have seen is the American one, which is dubbed and had several scenes added featuring a United Nations news broadcast. The original Japanese release was apparently much more satirical in tone, whereas the American version removes all the comedy. It is still enjoyable as a giant monster movie, though.
This movie originally began life as a stop-motion feature entitled KIng Kong VS Frankenstein, and was conceived by Willis O'Brien as a sequel to the 1933 Kong, gradually turning into a Godzilla movie after Toho studios got involved. Although there are some brief stop-motion sequences, it is by and large a typical kaiju ega movie (in other words, it's men in rubber suits). While fans of O'Brien's still-impressive stop-motion work on the original King Kong may be irked by the idea of the big ape being played by a Japanese guy in a suit, I personally think Kong looks pretty cool (it's certainly more impressive than the suit Toho used for their second Kong film, King Kong Escapes).
There are some inconsistencies, most notably the fact that King Kong and Godzilla were radically different sizes in their respective films, but Toho got around this by the simple expedient of ignoring it. We've got two great big monsters beating each other up, so who cares about details? Also, in the original King Kong, the big ape had no special powers beyond being very strong, whereas Godzilla has radioactive breath; Toho addressed this seeming imbalance by having Kong derive strength from electricity, whereas Godzilla is weakened by touching power lines. One point that bugs me a little is the fact that, although this is the third Godzilla film, and the second to feature King Kong, there seems to be no connection to the previous movies. When the two monsters appear, the human characters act as though they have no prior knowledge of them, which seems odd when you take into account Godzilla had twice previously tried to destroy Tokyo, and King Kong did make kind of a mess of New York. King Kong VS Frankenstein was intended as a sequel to the original, but this idea was obviously dropped from the movie it became.
The climactic fight between the two monsters is great fun, sort of a giant sized version of a WWE match, only with more believable physiques and personalities. Kong shoving a tree down Godzilla's throat and the big green guy responding by walloping Kong with his tail are highly entertaining moments; obviously not as spectacular as the scenes of Kong fighting the dinosaurs in either the 1933 original or Peter Jackson's remake, but that's not the point. King Kong VS Godzilla is an enjoyable example of this type of movie; if you're new to the kaiju ega genre, it's an excellent starting point. It's just a shame King Kong VS Frankenstein never got made. Maybe if we all ask Peter Jackson nicely....
not everything from Japan is good
Apart from the first Godzilla movie (you know, the one that had scenes with Raymond Burr spliced into it when it was marketed to the West),I hate these types of Japanese movies. This is especially true because these were about the only Japanese movies seen in this country when I was little so I naturally assumed ALL Japanese movies sucked! Boy, was I wrong--it's just these type of films. If I had allowed the shabbiness of this movie and other Godzilla pics, I never would have been introduced to the splendor of Akira Kurasawa's work or classics such as Kaiden, Onibaba or Kiru.
Am I being too hard on these movies? Let's see. A man running around in a stupid looking dinosaur suit fighting another man in a cheesy gorilla suit that looks NOTHING LIKE KING KONG, rotten dubbing (I generally prefer subtitles, but as this is a kids movie it is natural they dubbed it),and crappier special effects than you'd see in an Ed Wood movie. Yep, given all this, this movie (as well as Godzilla versus ANYTHING else) stinks. I think I'd rather be stabbed in the groin with an ice pick than see any of these movies again.