It's just so incredible that this film was made in 1933. Even more than the stop-motion beasts, those Gustave Dore- inspired glass and matte paintings add an otherworldly, dreamlike quality that is unapparelled. It's just so beautiful to look at.
Real talk, Fay Wray played the hell out of that role. Ann Darrow was just a simple _damsel in distress_ character, but you could tell she was putting her all into every scene.
Imagine the kids watching King Kong when it came out at the time, their minds must've exploded. Even Peter Jackson couldn't believe how time consuming it was to recreate even one scene from this movie today.
I genuinely love that UPN promo. Also, I have the special edition DVD that came out in '05. Peter Jackson and Weta recreate the lost spider pit sequence as a special feature. They recreate Willis O'brien's techniques as close as possible. It's a great insight into how the film was made, and really fun.
I first watched King Kong when I was eight or nine years old. It pulled me in and all these years later it still looks incredible! An absolute classic of horror and special effects! Great positive review. I don't think I'll ever get that UPN promo out of my head... Now let's get stupid!
The effects really are amazing all things considered. And you are right it is impressive to see the fur on King Kong move in the stop motion effects. Legend has it that King Kong was so mad that a human played Bonzo in Going Bananas so that is why he went berserk in New York.
They are not just good all things considered.. They are just good.. The fact that you can tell its stop motion doesn't make it bad.. Most great cgi is still obviously cgi
There are so many good things about this movie, I love it to bits. But I think one of my favourite by-products by far, was that a young man named Ray Harryhausen saw it as a kid, and inspired by the work of Willis O'Brien, went to work carrying SFX in cinema on his own back for several decades. People in the business today 'still' cite Harryhausen, and O'Brien by dint, as the rulebook for creating and filming special effects in movies. It's a beautiful piece of cinema history continuity, and it all goes back to King Kong.
It’s hard picking on classics! Always entertaining to watch the Snob review the good movies from time to time even if not all the jokes come fully from the sarcastic heart of him 😆
He really is one of the coolest beasts in cinema. So hard to believe that he has lasted that long. That stopmotion is still fantastic. I really enjoyed the Peter Jackson version too. The 1976 remake wasn't a patch on the original.
The 76 one was utter tripe. It's really unforgiveable that a movie made forty years after the 33 original looked like it was made with less effort, less money, and less care, when at least the middle of those things clearly wasn't true, and the other two might not have been. It was just rubbish.
@@DocZFlux The sets were dull, the style was dull, the locations were dull, I really don't know why they even bothered. They had a man in a suit wrestling a snake toy, and I want to point out Ed Wood was mocked for that.
For what they could accomplish nearly 90 years ago, the stop motion is impressive! We didn’t have Wes Andersen or Laika films yet & this was ahead of its time bringing a big ape to life without harming an actual gorilla.
THAT UPN promo had me R-O-L-L-I-N-G. King Kong was one of the first movies on TV I remember actually sitting through as a little kid. The original and the best.
This movie has been shown on WOR-TV (channel 9) on Thanksgiving during the “Holiday Movie Special” back in the 1980’s, and it became a staple for years.
Fun fact: The cause of the zombie outbreak in Peter Jackson's cult classic horror film Brain Dead (known as "Dead Alive" in the US), the Sumatran Rat Monkey, is canonically from Kong's home of Skull Island. This is mentioned in the movie Brain Dead, a 2005 book on the history of Skull Island, and a crate containing a rat monkey is in Peter Jackson's remake of King Kong. The rat monkey from Skull Island was inspired by the Giant Rat of Sumatra which appeared in Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's Sherlock Holmes story "The Adventurss of a Sussex Vampire".
Just think that they could show a bra-less woman on screen in the 1930s and then the '50s happened and when they did it again in the '60s it was a huge scandal.
My grandma passed away recently, she was born the same year this movie came out and she always loved Kong, especially this one and the 2005 version. We watched Godzilla vs. Kong before she passed and she was rooting for Kong all the way and loved that he got his happy ending.
I really didn’t like Peter Jackson’s remake - in either cut - but I’m grateful to it for giving him a chance to make the excellent making-of documentary for Kong ‘33 that’s included on the DVD and Blu-ray.
My dad didn’t care for the Jackson film either. Think the only compliment he had was the mo-cap of Serkis as Kong, but really hated the 3.5 hour runtime
@@LucyLioness100 Serkis' Kong was outstanding! When AMPAS finally wises up and gives him an honorary Oscar for his contributions to movie, Kong deserves as much adoration as Gollum.
Our local drive-in theater showed this a couple of years ago, and it is AMAZING how the rear projection effects hold up. Just incredible for a film shot when my GRANDFATHER wasn't even a teen yet.
The films where so famous that Cybertronians would recreated the T-rex vs Kong fight centuries later. Megatron and Optimus Primal are actual just really dedicated LARP'ers who wanted to include all they're friends.
King Kong Escapes is a Toho, R&B co-production...east meets west! I'm surprised you didn't mention it! That is a really cute movie, King Kong Escapes is a live action Rankin-Bass movie via Toho know how! There is also a Frankenstein Conquers the world, King Kong 33 connection...very interesting
I would rather watch old movies like King Kong (1933,) while being stoned out of my mind. Than watch The Miz vs Bad Bunny at WrestleMania 37, next month.
Was Fay Wray's blonde hair a wig or a dye job? I've heard both from various sources. Just curious because she certainly was one of Hollywood's most beautiful scream queens.
I own this movie on Blu-ray, which comes in a hardcover case with a booklet. 2:22- Yeah, like you haven't brought that up multiple times before your Rocky Horror review. 9:16- Speaking of which, when do we get out Treehouse of Horror: King Homer reference.
While it does remind you that it’s from the early 30s a fair amount, it is a good film overall! That said, my favorite version is the Peter Jackson one (I just love the ambitious epicness of it, how sympathetic it makes Kong, and how it led to one of the best tie-in games ever made)!
I revisited the 2005 movie not too long ago and it still holds up aside from a couple of dated CGI scenes. Then again, Lord of the Rings also had some dodgy effects moments with the giant monsters.
It’s cool to see an internet reviewer talk about a movie that came out before 1970. Not enough videos on older movies. Also ready for King Kong vs. Godzilla next week
Fun fact: Donkey Kong was originally supposed to be a Popeye game with Popeye saving Olivia from Pluto. But they couldn't get the license, so they quickly changed the designs into an ape and a small carpenter (yes, Mario originally was a carpenter, not a plumber).
lmao the little dolls when they get tossed into the pit. then the fact the tickets were 20$. i know back then it was a lot but now it's the typical movie ticket price.
King Kong was the last movie I saw in theaters before the pandemic shut everything down. Thanks TCM Classics and Fathom Events Edited: dyac don't interject kind or foul language
Sadly, given how badly the film stock they used back then disintegrates over time, I think it’s too late to find the original footage. At least Peter Jackson’s crew tried their best to recreate it with old-school techniques for the DVD!
The Peter Jackson version gets a lot of flack, but I really like it. It conjures in me all the emotions you attribute to the original, which I just can't get that much into despite having tried several times. Also yeah, Kong: Skull Island is freaking amazing.
@@millabasset1710 Ha! I don't know where it comes from (I heard it from my dad). It was just the first thing I thought of when I read your lion / lying quote... Is that a pun?
Been enjoying your snobbing for awhile now and I have honestly been waiting for a EATEN ALIVE!! reference. I literally made a whole project about that movie its just so bonkers.
The good old days of cinema. They may not have had CG, but they had the passion to make a piece of cinematic art to actually pay to make it happen instead of making a movie to make money from merchandising. That’s all movies are anymore, what will be less risk while staying status quo, it just cheapens the experience a little.
1:53 Product Placement! Hope they pay you to say that. 7:28 Venture? Is Rusty Venture's grandpa financing this voyage? 17:12 Holy crap, that was MY local UPN station! Until UPN merged with the WB Network to make The CW. I haven't seen that logo in years! Dud, are you from the Bay Ares too? This is what I come to The Cinema Snob for: fascinating movie trivia and jokes.
I remember seeing this in theaters in 2020 as part of Fathom Events. I know this because it was the last movie I saw in the theaters before they were temporarily shut down for obvious reasons.
I got to see the theater in 2019. It’s awesome they play movies in the Casino. When I was there, they had posters of Once Upon a Time in Hollywood posted on the walls.
@@reikun86 Ya when I heard Casino, I thought it was gambling but they have a dance hall on the second floor above the theater. It's a beautiful place. The mural in the movie theater is really nice.
I think that’s the fake out, they want us to believe that they are remaking Godzilla Vs. King Kong but they are doing Godzilla Vs Mechagodzilla only instead of King Caesar 🤦🏼♂️ Oh God, they are getting the King Kong they wanted to get in that movie.
I more think the Peter Jackson's Remake of King Kong was was better than the original because his King Kong was less of a Monster & less of a Wild animal & I felt more bad for the More Realistic King Kong over the Monster King Kong Brad. 😥💖
We’ll see with how he is in Godzilla vs Kong (given how they seem to be doing a Mothra thing with him wanting to protect the little girl he’s bonded with) but yeah, Jackson gave us the most sympathetic and believable version (since Andy Serkis went to Africa to live with apes for a time to better inform his performance)!
It's just so incredible that this film was made in 1933. Even more than the stop-motion beasts, those Gustave Dore- inspired glass and matte paintings add an otherworldly, dreamlike quality that is unapparelled. It's just so beautiful to look at.
“A giant gorilla has never tried ripping off my clothes!”
Well, Brad, have you made yourself accessible enough?
I would definitely watch a long video of that Brad guy going in depth about the effects and backstory
23:39 The first "May I speak to your manager" woman in cinema history.
Real talk, Fay Wray played the hell out of that role. Ann Darrow was just a simple _damsel in distress_ character, but you could tell she was putting her all into every scene.
He´s finally here, performing for you! He´s the first member of the kaiju crew!
Ah, Cinema Snob reviewing a classic. What a great way to start the week.
"Quentin Tarantino's King Kong"
Well Mighty Peking Man but close.
Imagine the kids watching King Kong when it came out at the time, their minds must've exploded.
Even Peter Jackson couldn't believe how time consuming it was to recreate even one scene from this movie today.
This version is the best one.
I genuinely love that UPN promo. Also, I have the special edition DVD that came out in '05. Peter Jackson and Weta recreate the lost spider pit sequence as a special feature. They recreate Willis O'brien's techniques as close as possible. It's a great insight into how the film was made, and really fun.
I first watched King Kong when I was eight or nine years old. It pulled me in and all these years later it still looks incredible! An absolute classic of horror and special effects!
Great positive review. I don't think I'll ever get that UPN promo out of my head... Now let's get stupid!
"Who can forget the time a 60 ft. tall Pete Davidson completely destroyed Staten Island?"
❤
or that time an 80ft Ed Koch destroyed New York City.
@@TheGM-20XX ???
@@TheGM-20XX Don't worry I get ya.
@@chrisbg99Ah, so you too are a person of taste.
I bet the crew wish that they had gone to Candy Apple Island instead.
What's on candy apple island?
@@mullaoslo
Apes, but they're not so big.
I still belive this whole talking about a giant ape is nothing but a hoax made up by ape island's board of tourism
The effects really are amazing all things considered. And you are right it is impressive to see the fur on King Kong move in the stop motion effects. Legend has it that King Kong was so mad that a human played Bonzo in Going Bananas so that is why he went berserk in New York.
It's still one of the most magical looking films. Instead of realism it feels like a dream.
They are not just good all things considered.. They are just good.. The fact that you can tell its stop motion doesn't make it bad.. Most great cgi is still obviously cgi
"What do you think Smithers? "
"I think women and seamen don't mix."
Yes... we all know what you think about that.
There are so many good things about this movie, I love it to bits. But I think one of my favourite by-products by far, was that a young man named Ray Harryhausen saw it as a kid, and inspired by the work of Willis O'Brien, went to work carrying SFX in cinema on his own back for several decades. People in the business today 'still' cite Harryhausen, and O'Brien by dint, as the rulebook for creating and filming special effects in movies. It's a beautiful piece of cinema history continuity, and it all goes back to King Kong.
Not to mention Harryhausen’s movies inspired the creator of Godzilla. Without King Kong we wouldn’t have the modern Kaiju pantheon.
It’s hard picking on classics! Always entertaining to watch the Snob review the good movies from time to time even if not all the jokes come fully from the sarcastic heart of him 😆
I think it’s fun when he throws in those gems. You can really tell his love of film when he not making fun of z grade movies and porn.
He really is one of the coolest beasts in cinema. So hard to believe that he has lasted that long. That stopmotion is still fantastic. I really enjoyed the Peter Jackson version too. The 1976 remake wasn't a patch on the original.
If only more remakes had the ambition of the Peter Jackson version!
The 76 one was utter tripe. It's really unforgiveable that a movie made forty years after the 33 original looked like it was made with less effort, less money, and less care, when at least the middle of those things clearly wasn't true, and the other two might not have been. It was just rubbish.
@@Blisterdude123 I mean, if you do a Kong movie and there’s not a single dinosaur or giant bug, you’ve fucked it up!
@@DocZFlux The sets were dull, the style was dull, the locations were dull, I really don't know why they even bothered. They had a man in a suit wrestling a snake toy, and I want to point out Ed Wood was mocked for that.
But at least it gave us "King Kong Lives!"
For what they could accomplish nearly 90 years ago, the stop motion is impressive! We didn’t have Wes Andersen or Laika films yet & this was ahead of its time bringing a big ape to life without harming an actual gorilla.
THAT UPN promo had me R-O-L-L-I-N-G. King Kong was one of the first movies on TV I remember actually sitting through as a little kid. The original and the best.
You could make a movie on Merian C. Cooper's life because he was platinum grade badass.
Yeah, he and Ernest Schoedsack (sp?) had fascinating lives - apart and together - before they even co-directed Kong.
Cooper has a cameo as one of the fighter pilots who guns down Kong at the end, presumably because he was a fighter pilot in real life.
@@graemesmith6721 I like that they got Frank Darabont and Rick Baker to fill those roles in the PJ remake.
This movie has been shown on WOR-TV (channel 9) on Thanksgiving during the “Holiday Movie Special” back in the 1980’s, and it became a staple for years.
I didn't know any of those facts about the history and making of the movie. Very informative and interesting.
They should've kept Kong alive so he could fight Q the Winged Serpent on top of the Chrysler Building
I love that movie.
I would watch that for sure. Q The Winged Serpent ROCKS !
Then Rose and Jack could debate _that_ bit of movie trivia while on a top secret mission.
Funny you mention the Chrysler Building: th-cam.com/video/HIgunO2SO6U/w-d-xo.html
Or fighting giant claw
Fun fact: The cause of the zombie outbreak in Peter Jackson's cult classic horror film Brain Dead (known as "Dead Alive" in the US), the Sumatran Rat Monkey, is canonically from Kong's home of Skull Island. This is mentioned in the movie Brain Dead, a 2005 book on the history of Skull Island, and a crate containing a rat monkey is in Peter Jackson's remake of King Kong. The rat monkey from Skull Island was inspired by the Giant Rat of Sumatra which appeared in Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's Sherlock Holmes story "The Adventurss of a Sussex Vampire".
I remember that.
Love Dead Alive.
5:33 Must've been real cold on set that day.
Just think that they could show a bra-less woman on screen in the 1930s and then the '50s happened and when they did it again in the '60s it was a huge scandal.
@@MandleRoss It would've been a scandal at any point after the Hays code. The original King Kong was produced *just* before it.
I get the feeling that King Kong didn't just save RKO from bankruptcy, but also had a big hand in putting them there.
Hehe.... big hand.
At the beginning of Son of Kong, Carl Denham is hiding out in his apartment because everyone in New York is suing him.
My grandma passed away recently, she was born the same year this movie came out and she always loved Kong, especially this one and the 2005 version. We watched Godzilla vs. Kong before she passed and she was rooting for Kong all the way and loved that he got his happy ending.
I love how the cinema snob knows to call Mario jump man.
This was the last movie I saw in theaters before the shutdown last spring. Really great film.
Missed an opportunity to include the scene where a lady at the screening of Kong complains “a gorilla, we have plenty of those here in New York!”
Fun little fact some of these Kong island sets were used in the Burning of Atlanta scene from 'Gone With the Wind'.
Really?
@@pheunithpsychic-watertype9881 Read it in a book. I believe it was about movie studios in Culver City, CA from Arcadia publishing.
I really didn’t like Peter Jackson’s remake - in either cut - but I’m grateful to it for giving him a chance to make the excellent making-of documentary for Kong ‘33 that’s included on the DVD and Blu-ray.
My dad didn’t care for the Jackson film either. Think the only compliment he had was the mo-cap of Serkis as Kong, but really hated the 3.5 hour runtime
@@LucyLioness100 Serkis' Kong was outstanding! When AMPAS finally wises up and gives him an honorary Oscar for his contributions to movie, Kong deserves as much adoration as Gollum.
Our local drive-in theater showed this a couple of years ago, and it is AMAZING how the rear projection effects hold up. Just incredible for a film shot when my GRANDFATHER wasn't even a teen yet.
The films where so famous that Cybertronians would recreated the T-rex vs Kong fight centuries later.
Megatron and Optimus Primal are actual just really dedicated LARP'ers who wanted to include all they're friends.
Ok so who would win Michael Bay's Optimus Prime vs Peter Jackson's King Kong ?
@@michaelknepper9332 King Kong, because he's more accurately adapted.
@@Avenger85438 TRUE but Michael Bay will have to get one big EXPLOSION IN !!!
A whole movie with multiple shots of Kong holding people in his hand and not a single "Will it fit" joke? For shame Brad, for shame.
Nothing like Brad riffing on a true cinematic classic
King Kong was so popular, that The Rocky Horror Picture Show Theme acknowledged it!
I think this is one of the first films to have a novelization tie in which was released 1 year before the film
Thanks for including the UPN commercial. That was fun. (The only thing missing from your enjoyable review was Lloyd.)
Gotta call BS....stop motion Jason Alexander is terrifying in 2021. He has that uncanny valley thing going on.
Stop motion George is getting UPSET!!!
I wasn't expecting to hear that start... But I should have!
Fay Ray's continual screaming makes me wonder why Kong doesn't eat her to shut her up!!
King Kong Escapes is a Toho, R&B co-production...east meets west! I'm surprised you didn't mention it! That is a really cute movie, King Kong Escapes is a live action Rankin-Bass movie via Toho know how! There is also a Frankenstein Conquers the world, King Kong 33 connection...very interesting
Damn, I had forgotten about the Giant grasshopper movie, i should rewatch that on MST3K
I'd love to see Snob review other old movies, like Psycho, The Night of the Hunter, Cape Fear (both of them), etc.
The Night of the Hunter gives me chills. No ghosts, no supernatural monsters, but straight up evil in humanity.
Screw the Wlhelm Scream! Why isn’t the scream at 13:23 used in a bunch of movies?!
I would rather watch old movies like King Kong (1933,) while being stoned out of my mind. Than watch The Miz vs Bad Bunny at WrestleMania 37, next month.
This movie was made just in time to avoid the inevitable cuts that would have been necessary when the Production Code was enforced.
6:03 Bert Saxby?! Tell him he's fired. 😋
Was Fay Wray's blonde hair a wig or a dye job? I've heard both from various sources. Just curious because she certainly was one of Hollywood's most beautiful scream queens.
The giant gate set in King Kong was in Gone With The Wind. In the burning of Atlanta seen.
I own this movie on Blu-ray, which comes in a hardcover case with a booklet.
2:22- Yeah, like you haven't brought that up multiple times before your Rocky Horror review.
9:16- Speaking of which, when do we get out Treehouse of Horror: King Homer reference.
While it does remind you that it’s from the early 30s a fair amount, it is a good film overall! That said, my favorite version is the Peter Jackson one (I just love the ambitious epicness of it, how sympathetic it makes Kong, and how it led to one of the best tie-in games ever made)!
Yeah I love Jackson's version, and the game based off of his remake.
I revisited the 2005 movie not too long ago and it still holds up aside from a couple of dated CGI scenes.
Then again, Lord of the Rings also had some dodgy effects moments with the giant monsters.
My favorite monster movie of all time
My favorite monster movies:
King Kong
Godzilla: King Of The Monsters
The Creature From The Black Lagoon
Alien
Cloverfield.
The Beast Fron 2,000 Fathoms.
It Came From Beneath The Sea.
Gojira.
I had a feeling Brad would get to this one soon.
It’s cool to see an internet reviewer talk about a movie that came out before 1970. Not enough videos on older movies.
Also ready for King Kong vs. Godzilla next week
I’m stoked
I love that you did this review. You often choose unique films. Thank you
More than just a movie. We might not even have the Mario franchise or godzilla and saiyan lore if not for kong
Oozaru--mystical monkey king giant ape retconned to alien giant ape...based on _the_ Anerican kaiju, King Kong --gotta love Toryama!
Fun fact: Donkey Kong was originally supposed to be a Popeye game with Popeye saving Olivia from Pluto. But they couldn't get the license, so they quickly changed the designs into an ape and a small carpenter (yes, Mario originally was a carpenter, not a plumber).
Or Kirby
@@changsiah2 really? How so?
@@pheunithpsychic-watertype9881 lawsuit between Donkey Kong and King Kong
lmao the little dolls when they get tossed into the pit. then the fact the tickets were 20$. i know back then it was a lot but now it's the typical movie ticket price.
i remember the first time i saw kong as a child it blew my mind
King Kong was the last movie I saw in theaters before the pandemic shut everything down. Thanks TCM Classics and Fathom Events
Edited: dyac don't interject kind or foul language
I'd watch that 90 minute special effects review/commentary with Snob
Nice job, Brad. This took a lot of work. One of your best.
I hope someone finds the bug pit scene one day.
Sadly, given how badly the film stock they used back then disintegrates over time, I think it’s too late to find the original footage. At least Peter Jackson’s crew tried their best to recreate it with old-school techniques for the DVD!
The Peter Jackson version gets a lot of flack, but I really like it. It conjures in me all the emotions you attribute to the original, which I just can't get that much into despite having tried several times. Also yeah, Kong: Skull Island is freaking amazing.
I saw this one 3 months ago. It has an endearing and charming vibe.
Tired of eating apples? Nice Gertie reference!
"I beat on my chest because I am the best. I'm the king of the jungle, and I ain't lion, get it? I ain't lying."
"I see" said the blind man as he picked up his hammer and saw.
@@timd3469 What are you referencing?
@@millabasset1710 Ha! I don't know where it comes from (I heard it from my dad). It was just the first thing I thought of when I read your lion / lying quote... Is that a pun?
This was a great episode. Funny as always and super interesting.
Been enjoying your snobbing for awhile now and I have honestly been waiting for a EATEN ALIVE!! reference. I literally made a whole project about that movie its just so bonkers.
The good old days of cinema. They may not have had CG, but they had the passion to make a piece of cinematic art to actually pay to make it happen instead of making a movie to make money from merchandising. That’s all movies are anymore, what will be less risk while staying status quo, it just cheapens the experience a little.
Creature from the Black Lagoon should be the next review
I wouldn’t mind if he covered all the Universal Monsters (The nixed Dark Universe included)
I hope you eventually review all the Indiana Jones films and the knock off films that came with them.😊
“You can be plucked off the street and turned into a star” Worked for Anya Taylor Joy.
Is that a joke or is that true?
@@JSPena It's real. At the time she was scouted as a model, Anya just dropped out of high school.
@@jlev1028 I see
RKO? Does that mean this was shown at the late night double feature picture show? (I wanna go)
@Katie Lewis The Transylvanians?
@@MandleRoss You left out that they're transsexual Transylvanians.
@Katie Lewis it’s amazing that there was time that Disney had to answer to another studio.
It's really a shame that they never made a "King Kong in Space".
Give it time.
Surely Godzilla went tho
@@CeeJayThe13th He did, and they 'res a SpaceGodzilla.
I'll bet it was made in some Asian country.
They were planning on doing it at some point...
This scene in the Peter Jackson movie was 2 and a half hours in made me laugh out loud. It's funny because it's true.
God this makes me want to replay The Movies and churn out 8 crappy movies per year
1:53 Product Placement! Hope they pay you to say that.
7:28 Venture? Is Rusty Venture's grandpa financing this voyage?
17:12 Holy crap, that was MY local UPN station! Until UPN merged with the WB Network to make The CW. I haven't seen that logo in years! Dud, are you from the Bay Ares too?
This is what I come to The Cinema Snob for: fascinating movie trivia and jokes.
Some great jokes in this one Brad! LOL!
2:20 Laughed so hard milk came out my nose. Well done.
I remember seeing this in theaters in 2020 as part of Fathom Events. I know this because it was the last movie I saw in the theaters before they were temporarily shut down for obvious reasons.
This is a prime example of classic Hollywood, would be great to see this at the Catalina Casino movie theater along with a Bugs Bunny short.
I got to see the theater in 2019. It’s awesome they play movies in the Casino.
When I was there, they had posters of Once Upon a Time in Hollywood posted on the walls.
@@reikun86 Ya when I heard Casino, I thought it was gambling but they have a dance hall on the second floor above the theater. It's a beautiful place. The mural in the movie theater is really nice.
@@zeathosthomas4847 it’s a great place.
What about the infamous lost spider pit scene?
It’s still one of the greatest movies ever made, and it always will be.
Thanks for the hilarity, Brad!
20:27 Awsome reference
King Kong is a David O. Selznick production which means it can cross over with Gone With The Wind
Kong With The Wind
If the villain from Last Action Hero succeeded, would he had brought the funny stop motion Kong to the real world?
Kong could of attended Hitler's party.
A pure classic!
19:45 I literally made almost the exact same joke when I saw this in the theaters when they rereleased this.
I just watched it for the first time last month
That upn reference was so good!
You should totally do the original universal dracula and Frankenstein
This is the greatest movie ever made!
I think that’s the fake out, they want us to believe that they are remaking Godzilla Vs. King Kong but they are doing Godzilla Vs Mechagodzilla only instead of King Caesar 🤦🏼♂️ Oh God, they are getting the King Kong they wanted to get in that movie.
The UPN promo was awesome!
Hopefully King Kong Escapes will also be included
I more think the Peter Jackson's Remake of King Kong was was better than the original because his King Kong was less of a Monster & less of a Wild animal & I felt more bad for the More Realistic King Kong over the Monster King Kong Brad. 😥💖
&more of a wild animal
We’ll see with how he is in Godzilla vs Kong (given how they seem to be doing a Mothra thing with him wanting to protect the little girl he’s bonded with) but yeah, Jackson gave us the most sympathetic and believable version (since Andy Serkis went to Africa to live with apes for a time to better inform his performance)!
Me&my mom are going to stay out of the Movie theater until the Colvid Numbers continue to Drop down to 0 unless it's outdoors in your car. 😇