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Queen Kong
(1976)
Director: Frank Agrama
Cast: Rula Lenska, Suzy Arthur, Robin Askwith
When producer Dino De Laurentiis' decided to
remake King Kong, his decision to
do so influenced the film world in two ways. The
main and more lasting was that it, along with
other movies of the period like Jaws
and Star Wars, assisted in the
evolution of the modern-day Hollywood
blockbuster. The second way was that even before
it was made, De Laurentiis' large-scale
publicity campaign (in ways also very similar to
modern-day Hollywood blockbusters) sparked
filmmakers from other countries to make
homegrown versions of King Kong.
Probably the most well-known of them is
Mighty Peking Man from Hong Kong. Some
of you no doubt know of South Korea's
A*P*E, which I
reviewed earlier. In recent months, the Italian
Yeti: Giant Of The 20th Century
has started to make the bootlegger circuit. The
most obscure Kong clone of them
all, however, seems to be Queen Kong,
from England. (Technically, it was a
co-production with Italy and a few other
countries.) Never heard of it? Well, if you
haven't, there's a good reason for that, and that's
because
it never got a theatrical release in England or
North America, or just about anywhere else. And
the reason for that was that De
Laurentiis himself got wind of this movie just
before its theatrical release, and he
immediately sent in his pack of lawyers to
threaten a hefty lawsuit should the movie be
released. The Queen Kong producers
caved into De Laurentiis' demands, though it
seems they did so more because De Laurentiis
could afford the time and expense of a lawsuit
than any possible realization they might have done wrong.
So why did De Laurentiis pick on the
producers of this movie, yet leave those three
other movies alone? Well, in the cases of
Mighty
Peking
Man and Yeti,
they were released the subsequent year, long
after King Kong had finished in
theaters; in other words, he probably didn't
consider them real competition under these
circumstances. And as for A*P*E, I
seriously doubt that anyone at the time (even
those involved in the production) would have
considered it any serious threat, given that
it's an incredibly bad movie no matter how you
look at it. Then what was it about Queen
Kong? I'm not sure, but I came up with
several likely theories upon watching the movie,
which is now available on DVD (probably because
these days De Laurentiis is lucky to get even
one movie a year made.) The less obvious theory
is that Queen Kong was made in a
more "western" way than those other movies - not
just shot in the English language like
A*P*E, not just set in an
English-speaking country like Yeti,
but having more of a western attitude that's not
too far removed from that found in Hollywood
movies - and even back then, a movie that was
from Hollywood or resembling such was far easier
to sell around the world than other kinds. De
Laurentiis may have felt a financial threat.
Another theory is that Queen Kong
was made to be an (intentional) comedy; De Laurentiis, who was
fiercely proud of his version of the tale, may
not have taken kindly to what may have seemed to
be a mockery of his efforts.
Actually, it's the third theory that seems to
be the most likely explanation as to why
Queen Kong's theatrical release was
stopped. Queen Kong, despite its
comic perspective, happens to echo the original
movie much more closely than those other
big ape movies, not just with its (possibly)
copyright-infringing title. The storyline pretty
much is that of King Kong, though
of course with various changes made to it in an
attempt to make it a vehicle for non-stop humor
rather than how the original was made to thrill
and invoke wonder in audiences. (Smart readers
will have noticed I used the word "attempt" in
the previous sentence, and I'm pretty sure they
also won't be thinking of the likelihood that
the movie became thrilling and filled with
wonder despite the filmmakers' comic
intentions.)
The most obvious of the changes is with the
genders of all the characters, not just Kong.
For example, the filmmaker in this version is
Luce Habit (English TV commercial actress Lenska),
a feminist director who at the beginning of the
movie is having problems filming her jungle
epic. Her leading man is proving not to be macho
enough, and a particularly uncomfortable scene
soon has him shrieking for his agent, and for
his tailor - 'cause he's gay, ho ho (I
can only imagine the hilarity on the sets of
Rock Hudson westerns.) "I should have
known a man couldn't take it - they're all the
same," Luce sighs after he calls a "female
chauvinist cow" right before storming off the
set. So she goes on a one-woman talent search,
and finds it when she spots petty thief Ray Fay
(Askwith, of the Confessions Of...
series) stealing a King Kong movie
poster at a local marketplace. She drugs Ray and
has him shanghaied aboard her all-female manned
(uh, better make that, "womaned") ship The
Liberated Lady, where they set sail for the
African island of Lazanga. "Where they do the
conga," she and everyone else says each and
every time they mention out loud this island's
name, even though it proves not to be funny even
the first time it's done.
Once they get to the island, they encounter a
female-dominated tribe that on first sight
decides Ray would be a great sacrifice for
something they keep calling "Kong", kidnap him
off the ship that night, and present him to Kong
- who of course turns out to be a giant ape,
though this one has sizable breasts and has
(unlike the original Kong) a legitimate reason
for not having a penis. Kong takes him away and
becomes smitten with him, the terrified Ray soon
finds himself falling under the charms of this
big ape, and... well, as I said earlier, the
story here is more or less just a gender
reversal of the original King Kong.
And that's happens to be one of the biggest problems to be
found in Queen Kong. For much of
the running time, the movie thinks that simply
switching the genders of the characters in
King Kong is hilarious by itself, and
nothing else needs to be done. While this kind
of thing may be funny as a solitary gag in a
movie (as it can show us how silly sexual
stereotypes can be), you simply can't stay at
this level again and again throughout the movie.
You have to work harder than that, creating some
amusing twists as a result of the gender bender
that take the movie to a higher level.
Queen Kong only attempts twice
to put an extra spin on key scenes, and the
results are mixed. The first time is a
moderately amusing moment after Kong is captured
and brought back to London, when a sleazy
promoter insists that Kong be covered with a
giant bra and panties so that nobody in the
audience will be offended. Then when Kong
escapes and goes on a rampage, Ray becomes her
P.R. man and makes her into a symbol for the
feminist movement, which results in the women of
London (including Andy Capp's wife) taking to
the streets in protest. While this had the
promise to make for a zany climax, it instead
falls flat. The women come out, and... protest.
There's nothing funny about the protesting. You
don't get anything like feminist leaders being
interviewed on TV about Queen Kong, or women's
groups doing crazy things to protect Kong. The
sight of hundreds of women simply protesting
isn't itself a particularly crazy twist.
Instead, you can only see it as the filmmakers
wasting an appalling amount of time and money,
having rounded up all these extras to do nothing
but shout. Such wasted opportunities didn't
start here. Earlier in the movie, Queen
Elizabeth (played by a look-alike) is seen
arriving at the gala that's to unveil Queen Kong
to the world. So what does the film use Her
Majesty for? One subsequent ten-second scene
where she knees the sleazy promoter in the
groin.
And that's pretty much as funny as the movie
gets. Even though Queen Kong is
filled with various other kinds of humor, the
movie is amazingly consistent in that almost
none of the gags manage to even make you smile
just a little. There are awful puns in the
Carry On tradition, like when one of
the natives answers a telephone and announces
out loud, "Mr. Tarzan? Your wife is on the other
vine!" There's topical humor that is seriously
dated and won't make sense to many viewers, such
as some moments that seem to be spoofs of
British television commercials. Though even the
references that viewers will understand aren't
any funnier, like when Ray reacts to a dinosaur
by saying, "It's all teeth! Just like Jimmy
Carter!" There are gags that simply makes no
sense, like the scene where Luce wounds a
man-eating plant with her knife, and says about
the still-active plant, "A rose, was a rose, was
a rose." And there are plenty of gags that are
just so unbelievably stupid that you have to
wonder about the intelligence of the writers -
though there's always the chance that maybe my
sense of humor is flawed, and I can't understand
the hilarity of Luce and her female expedition
coming across a dangerous set of dinosaur-sized
bagpipes. ("It'll take the high road, and we'll
take the low road.") Though it may have been
that the movie didn't seem to have the money to
give the audience anything resembling a good look at these
bagpipes.
On that note, this seems to be a good time to
talk about the special effects as a whole. As
you may have guessed, they are terrible. That's
not to say that state-of-the-art effects should
have been in the movie. No, for a movie that's
meant to be a cheeky and goofy comedy, excellent
effects would have been both distracting and out
of place where everything else seems to be
having fun with it all. This is one movie where
the special effects need to be cheesy.
However, expect for some fairly impressive
(though carefully made to not be too
impressive) modelwork displayed once Kong
arrives in London, the effects in the movie are
so unbelievably bad that they are not amusingly
terrible or terribly amusing - they are just
plain terrible. The Kong costume is made out of
several pieces, the lines of each often being
very visible. There's back projection that makes
local weatherman segments look like they were
done by ILM. The movie also has the habit of
turning several shades darker in every shot
where the effects team melded two separate shots
into one, such as when the human characters are
doing their best to not get crushed from the
feet of Kong stomping inches away from them. I
know these examples may sound funny and appear
to be intentional efforts by the technical crew,
so I feel I should also point out that many of
the scenes not involving effects are filled with
just as many technical foul-ups, particularly
the daytime sequences aboard The Liberated
Lady.
It's a testament to the cast of Queen
Kong that they come across pretty well
despite all these problems, certainly a lot more
than Queen Kong herself, who's given no real
personality at all by the screenplay. Sure, just
about everything the actors are made to do or
say is gravely unfunny, yet they go through it
all with that British pluck and spirit. Watching
them, you get the feeling that they are a bunch
of nice (and even funny) people who got forced
into a bad situation that they were powerless to
do anything about. It's then kind of a shame
that Queen Kong never got a
theatrical release, since a probably inevitable
foreign sale on this side of the Atlantic would
probably have given people here more exposure to
these actors, who manage to give the movie a
kind of a charm despite itself. In fact, the
movie may have been even more charming than
that; ten years later, De Laurentiis brought
onto the world King Kong Lives,
which had its own giant female ape. In fact, De
Laurentiis' movie has several other remarkable
similarities - you have to wonder why the makers
of Queen Kong didn't sue him.
Check for availability on Amazon (DVD) See also:
A*P*E,
King Kong Escapes,
King Kung Fu
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