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  • [suspenseful music]

  • (host) It's one of movies' most iconic moments.

  • King Kong Perched precariously

  • on top of the Empire State Building.

  • -[suspenseful music] -[King Kong roaring]

  • In what would become an international phenomenon,

  • "King Kong" revived a struggling studio

  • and birthed a canonical monster

  • that has endured for almost a century.

  • King Kong, as both a character and a film,

  • is commentary on greed, social economics,

  • and a disturbing snapshot

  • of racial politics in America

  • at the start of the 20th century.

  • I'm Dr. Emily Zarka, and this is "Monstrum."

  • Quick recap of the 1933 film:

  • Carl Denham, a filmmaker desperate

  • for his next box office hit,

  • hears rumors of a mysterious deity called Kong,

  • living on a secret island in the south seas.

  • Determined to make the rumored monster

  • the antagonist of his next film,

  • Carl heads out with a hired crew to capture Kong.

  • One member of the group

  • is an out-of-work actress named Anne,

  • played by iconic Hollywood beauty Fay Wray.

  • On the island, the group interrupts the ritual sacrifice

  • of a woman to the fabled Kong.

  • The natives, angry at the interruption,

  • and inexplicably captivated by Anne

  • decide she would be a more fitting tribute.

  • The foreigners attempt a hasty retreat to their boat,

  • but Anne is later kidnapped

  • and the natives string her up as an offering.

  • An infatuated Kong carries Anne off with Carl

  • and the crew in pursuit.

  • The rescue party discovers not only the massive gorilla

  • but living dinosaurs on the island.

  • Cut to a battle between Kong and the Tyrannosaurs Rex.

  • During the fight, it becomes clear

  • that Kong isn't a threat to Anne.

  • He's actually her protector,

  • but despite Kong saving Anne from the dangers of the island,

  • he is captured by the search party

  • and, ever the colonial fantasy capitalist gentleman,

  • Carl absconds with Kong back to New York City.

  • He opens a show featuring Kong

  • as the eighth wonder of the world.

  • [show music]

  • (Carl) Ladies and gentlemen, look at Kong,

  • the eighth wonder of the world.

  • [triumphant music]

  • (Emily) And as you can guess, this does not go well.

  • Kong escapes his chains

  • and captures Anne, whom he believes to be in danger.

  • He wreaks havoc upon the city

  • and famously climbs the Empire State Building

  • before being shot down by the military...

  • [suspenseful music]

  • falling dramatically to his death.

  • The airplanes got him.

  • Oh no, it wasn't the airplanes.

  • It was beauty killed the beast.

  • (Emily) The movie was produced by two filmmakers,

  • Merian C. Cooper and Ernest B. Shoedsack.

  • Cooper claims credit for crafting the original story.

  • One of his inspirations was a friend's unsuccessful attempt

  • to display two Komodo dragons at the Bronx Zoo.

  • Another was watching a plane

  • flying over New York City skyscrapers.

  • And Cooper drew heavily from a 19th century travel log,

  • "Explorations and Adventures in Equatorial Africa."

  • The book includes a recounting of a gorilla

  • who supposedly took a female villager into the jungle.

  • Monster horror films from the time,

  • like "The Gorilla" and "The Ape,"

  • featured gorillas violently murdering humans.

  • There's also "King of the Kongo,"

  • which probably isn't a coincidence

  • that the title resembles the "King Kong" namesake

  • four years later.

  • This one involves ivory smugglers and a giant gorilla

  • who at one point threatens the protagonist with a gun.

  • A quick aside here--

  • though gorillas are rarely aggressive,

  • popular Western opinion at the time stereotype the species

  • as rampaging violent untamable beasts,

  • and Cooper leaned into this trope.

  • He even wanted to use real gorillas

  • in the attack shots in the film.

  • Oh, and have the gorilla get into a fight

  • with a Komodo dragon,

  • which I guess kind of made it onto screen

  • in the T-Rex versus Kong battle.

  • And that was only possible thanks to Willis Harold O'Brien.

  • He was the stop-motion

  • and special-effects pioneer behind Kong,

  • while Marcel Delgado

  • was the sculptor behind Kong's famous form.

  • O'Brien might actually be responsible

  • for making Kong a giant.

  • He sized the creature up in an early concept portrait,

  • making Kong's first encounter with Anne more frightening.

  • While pre-production of the film staggered along,

  • hindered by a rotating door of script writers

  • and financial setbacks, RKO Radio Pictures

  • was headed for bankruptcy

  • after a string of box office busts.

  • They needed a hit and needed it fast,

  • so they put everything they had into "King Kong"--

  • marketing the film's groundbreaking special effects

  • and over-the-top plot

  • as a spectacle that had to be seen to be believed.

  • Kong himself was also a spectacle,

  • a terrifying monster on a rampage of destruction.

  • Ads of Kong on top of the Empire State Building

  • shocked the public,

  • and one trailer featured only a giant menacing shadow.

  • And it worked.

  • All ten shows a day were sold out

  • during opening weekend in New York City

  • in the middle of the Great Depression.

  • Record-setting attendance was followed by glowing reviews

  • that praised the film's technical achievements

  • and thrilling plot.

  • It made about $2 million worldwide

  • upon its first release

  • and single-handedly saved RKO from bankruptcy.

  • The harsh truth is that "King Kong"'s success

  • highlights the Western tendency

  • to fetishize and exploit foreign cultures.

  • "King Kong"'s influences give us a perspective

  • into the history of conquest and colonialism.

  • Both filmmakers, Cooper and Schoedsack,

  • previously worked on films documenting wildlife

  • and human inhabitants of exotic locales.

  • And jungle adventure films were a popular genre of the time.

  • These movies set in-- you guessed it--the jungle,

  • show predominantly white characters

  • exploring a faraway land.

  • A classic example-- "Tarzan of the Apes,"

  • and its many, many, many sequels and spinoffs.

  • Tarzan himself became king of the apes

  • and embodied the noble savage trope.

  • Then there's 1922's "Jungle Goddess,"

  • which featured a kidnapped white woman

  • who becomes the goddess of an African community.

  • Overall, there's a lot of racist

  • and colonialist tropes in this genre.

  • The white adventurers face threats

  • from stereotypically-portrayed natives

  • who are constructed as uncivilized, violent,

  • and obsessed with white female beauty.

  • But another nefarious influence on "King Kong"'s story

  • may have been the faux documentary

  • racial exploitation film "Ingagi."

  • In the film, African women

  • are offered as sexual sacrifices to gorillas,

  • essentially pornography that grotesquely demonized

  • interracial relationships.

  • The 1930 film would be pulled from theaters

  • under the Hays Code,

  • but not before reaching box-office success.

  • It was one of the highest grossing

  • Hollywood films that year.

  • This financial success likely fueled RKO Radio Pictures'

  • investment in "King Kong"'s creation and distribution.

  • They just needed to monetize racism in a less obvious way.

  • Considering the overt racism

  • at the time "King Kong" was produced,

  • Kong's place in the dark history

  • of dehumanizing people of color is undeniable.

  • Comparing people to and portraying them as gorillas,

  • monkeys, and orangutans was a common practice at the time,

  • and these undertones in the film

  • would not have gone unnoticed by moviegoers in 1933.

  • The so-called savage ape, dark and menacing,

  • obsessed with the beauty of a white woman

  • he seizes for his own

  • was a pretty transparent metaphor for racist fears.

  • There's also the fact that Kong's physical journey

  • from his native land to the U.S. to be exploited for profit

  • aligns with the narrative of enslaved people.

  • King Kong appears at a time when civil rights deprivations

  • were fueling cause for equality in housing,

  • employment, and education.

  • "King Kong" can be read as a metaphor

  • for how Black men were treated

  • and are still treated in America

  • as both glorious spectacle and violent threat.

  • Kong evokes the dangerous exotic other,

  • but he is also a sympathetic character

  • that the audience is meant to identify with.

  • Kong triumphantly clutches

  • the top of the needle in one hand

  • -and Anne in the other. -[Anne screaming]

  • He has not just conquered the city, but the world.

  • At the time, the Empire State Building

  • was the tallest building in the world.

  • He towers over the symbol of modern civilization.

  • Cooper stated that part of the creature's inspiration

  • came from a desire to place a symbol of prehistoric life

  • in the modern mechanized world

  • and have a modern weapon, the airplane, kill him.

  • In a press release for the film, he said,

  • "Why not place him at the pinnacle

  • "of the tallest building,

  • "symbol in steel, stone, and aspiration,

  • and pit him against modern man?"

  • Of course, as a foreigner on U.S. soil,

  • Kong's triumph is short-lived.

  • A revived RKO Radio Pictures

  • followed up the success of "King Kong" with a quick sequel,

  • "Son of Kong," released just nine months later.

  • But then no new contributions

  • to the franchise until the 1960s.

  • Sure, there were re-releases that drew big crowds

  • and established a global audience,

  • but nothing new was added to the story for almost 30 years.

  • And when those changes came, they would be pretty big ones.

  • He wreaks havoc upon the city

  • and famously climbs the Empire State Building

  • before being shot down by mm-the military.

  • Sorry, it's okay, I'll do the whole paragraph again anyway.

[suspenseful music]

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