Kong: Skull Island was my most anticipated movie in the first quarter 2017. And while it won’t be up for any end-of-year honors and won’t end up on my year’s top ten list, I found Kong: Skull Island to be a very engaging, exciting, and, if possible, original. While it wasn’t perfect, this movie was fantastic. As excited as I was to see it when I initially saw the trailer, I wasn’t feeling it the day of my viewing. Even with a Rotten Tomatoes score of 79%, I still felt like I would be disappointed. Since seeing it in the theater, I haven’t watched the most recent King Kong movie (the 2005 one starring Naomi Watts and Adrien Brody). I remember liking it a lot. But I don’t remember many of the details. I do remember it being extremely long. It honestly felt like it should have been two movies, which is why I haven’t watched it since, even though there has been a copy of the DVD on my bookshelf for the last decade.
Kong: Skull Island was not a sequel or a prequel, and it didn’t feel like a reboot. Sure, there have been other King Kong movies about a group of unknowns visiting Skull Island. However, this one had a different twist than the others, or I wasn’t paying enough attention (which is entirely possible). Still, this movie had a freshness that I didn’t suspect. That, plus its visuals, sound, lack of dull/unimportant moments, and relatively short length (118 minutes), allows me to fully endorse this movie as one you should try to see in the theater.
We meet King Kong for the first time within the film’s first five minutes. This is very different from the 2005 movie, in which we went about 90 minutes before we saw the monster for the first time. This gradual build-up was from the 1933 original and the 1976 remake. There is nothing wrong with this approach. I often like this approach. It builds intrigue. But if the three most recognizable King Kong movies replicated this format, why not create the newest rendition of the movie differently? And that’s precisely what director Jordan Vogt-Roberts (The Kings of Summer) did with his approach. The film begins with a fight sequence from World War II somewhere over the South Pacific. American military Lieutenant Hank Marlow and a Japanese soldier each parachute out of their solo fighter jets down onto an unknown island. The two continue to combat with guns, swords, and hands. The Japanese soldier has now run a weaponless Marlow to the edge of a cliff when a massive ape appears, roaring from beyond the cliff out of nowhere. The two men turn with astonished faces, and we fade away.
We then fast forward to 1973 Washington DC. A government official named Bill Randa (John Goodman – Flight, 10 Cloverfield Lane) and geologist Houston Brooks (Corey Hawkins – Straight Outta Compton, Non-Stop) are attempting to receive some funding for a trip to Skull Island, a recently discovered place somewhere in the South Pacific. They tell US Senator Willis (Step Brothers, The Visitor) that they want to scout the area while not disclosing everything Landsat (the company they work for) knows about the island. When Willis finally does agree to give the money, Randa goes a step further by asking for a military escort to the island. Colonel Preston Packard (Samuel L. Jackson – Black Snake Moan, Changing Lanes) and his Sky Devils squadron, which includes Captain Earl Cole (Shea Whigham – All the Real Girls, HBO’s Boardwalk Empire), Slivko (Thomas Mann – Project X, Beautiful Creatures), Jack Chapman (Toby Kebbell – Ben-Hur, The Counsellor), and others.
A shoot-first and ask-questions-later type of squad seems perfect for Randa’s expedition. Others partaking in the journey include their tracker, a former British Special Air Service captain named James Conrad (Tom Hiddleston – Crimson Peak, Thor), an anti-war photographer named Mason Weaver (Brie Larson – Room, Rampart), and other scientists from Landsat. There are many characters in this movie, and they aren’t very distinguishable from each other. It’s a tad frustrating at times because you don’t really form relationships with any of these people and, thus, don’t feel particularly terrible when they don’t make it. At the same time, this isn’t a character-driven movie. It’s an adventure movie. It’s a fantasy movie. It’s got some mystery. It’s got some action. It’s the furthest thing from a character study.
The excitement occurs when the group arrives on Skull Island. Some of the coolest CGI you’ll see all year occurs in the last hour-plus of this film. On this island, all animals, fish, and insects are the size of monsters. Some octopuses are the size of whales and buffalo, making African elephants look tiny. This is a big surprise to many on this adventure. There are secrets that some are keeping about the island, and this becomes a significant problem when people begin losing their lives. The truth will come out, but there is lots of mystery, intrigue, and suspense until then.
John C. Reilly (The Perfect Storm, The Lobster) is cast perfectly as Lieutenant Hank Marlow, the same American soldier we meet in the opening scene. We meet him some 20-30 minutes after the group lands on the enclave. He’s been surviving on the island for the last 30 years with the help of a tribe of natives who look fierce but don’t have the desire to hurt others. They have war paint and are armed with spears, but this is not to protect themselves from other humans. It is simply to fight the massive creatures when they are attacked.
The relationship between Marlow and the natives is excellent, and as soon as Marlow enters for the first time, we know that our group of Americans is safe. Marlow has some foreboding news, though, and makes the outlook on being rescued safely from the island dire. He informs the group that they haven’t seen anything yet because the most dangerous predatory species reside in the island’s bowels in deep, underground tunnels that have yet to emerge. Kong protects the island from these inhabitants who walk on two front limbs, have long thrashing tails, and partially exposed skulls. If these “skull crushers” remind you of, I don’t know, Godzilla, you wouldn’t be the only one to think so. If Kong can catch them when they are young, he can eliminate them before doing much damage. These skull crushers have killed Kong’s family, and if the military has any intentions of killing Kong, Marlow is the first one to tell them to think again. But of course, the military is there for a reason and simply isn’t going to say okay. Confrontation ensues, and lines are drawn between those who want to follow Packard’s lead and those who choose to listen to Marlow instead try to vacate the island as soon as possible. The last 30+ minutes become humans battling humans, humans battling these massive beasts, and these gigantic beasts fighting each other through jungles, mountains, and rivers. It’s all extremely captivating, and you don’t want it to end.
I did not love the number of indistinguishable characters in this movie. And while we needed to have enough of them to lose some of them to the massive predators on this island, it didn’t make it easy to identify many of the soldiers from the scientists. When you have so many characters, it can be hard to separate them, and it becomes even more challenging to become emotionally invested in them, even the ones who survive until the end. Likewise, I honestly didn’t care whether any of the main characters lived or died. I cared more about Kong than I did any of the humans. The acting was fine. Reilly was the highlight when his character in the wrong hands could have destroyed the movie. Hiddleston was fine, but for the lead, it never felt like he was carrying this movie. Larson’s character served little purpose other than to have the pretty young we associate with other King Kong movies. Jackson played the angry character we have become accustomed to. And as great as Goodman was in his last performance (2016’s 10 Cloverfield Lane), his performance was flat here.
Hiddleston, Larson, Jackson, and Goodman could have all been replaced with lesser-known characters, which would have been fine. This is especially true for an actress like Larson, who I would prefer being in more complex roles that evoke more emotion. But, as I often say, I understand the want to secure a big payday so that these actors have the financial security to take riskier, less financed independent projects. A movie like Kong: Skull Island provided a nice paycheck for Larson and others. But in a film like this, if my biggest gripe is the character development or character chemistry, that’s okay. I’m not watching a movie like this for its character development. I don’t want the acting to be phoned in, which wasn’t the case here. I like a lot of my movies to be heavy. This one had its fair share of humorous moments (primarily through Reilly’s character), but it worked for me. Seeing him with his casualness and joking personality was believable because he’d lived on that island for 22 years. The fear experienced by the other characters is nothing new to him. What the others fear the most is what he feels most protected by. It works.
Kong: Skull Island is the best adventure movie we see all year. While familiar with its premise, it does offer more originality than you would typically expect. And because of the advancements in technology since 2005, this movie provides a more rewarding visual experience. Unfortunately, there haven’t been many great movies in the first quarter 2017. While Get Out is the surprise hit, Kong: Skull Island holds its own as a standalone movie, and I recommend seeing it in the theater despite having a score that would typically suggest watching it at home.
Plot 8/10
Character Development 6/10
Character Chemistry 6/10
Acting 8/10
Screenplay 8/10
Directing 8.5/10
Cinematography 10/10
Sound 10/10
Hook and Reel 9/10
Universal Relevance 7/10
80.5%
B
Movies You Might Like If You Liked This Movie
- Dawn of the Planet of the Apes
- King Kong
- Godzilla Minus One
- Jurassic World
- Rampage