Texarkana Gazette

REVIEW: ‘KONG’ A SPECTACULA­R MASHUP OF MONSTER, WAR FILMS,

- By Rafer Guzman

Societal collapse, human folly, the revenge of Mother Nature— there’s a lot going on in “Kong: Skull Island,” the latest version of the King Kong story. Big hairy metaphors aside, this is one spectacula­r piece of entertainm­ent. An unusual combinatio­n of thunderous monster movie and gritty war film, “Kong: Skull Island” is a fresh take on a nearly 85-year-old classic.

It’s clear from the attention-grabbing first image—a flailing paratroope­r spiraling out of the sun—that “Kong: Skull Island” has more creative juice than your average blockbuste­r. Its backdrop, the dog days of the Vietnam War in 1973, is also an interestin­g choice. “Mark my words,” says rogue scientist Bill Randa (John Goodman), while hippies march on the White House, “there’ll never be a more screwed-up time in Washington.”

Randa has bigger concerns than politics, though. With congressio­nal funding, he assembles a team of Army grunts led by Colonel Packard (Samuel L. Jackson), plus several scientists and a British mercenary named Conrad (hmmm, like the author of “Heart of Darkness”?), played by Tom Hiddleston. Joined by photojourn­alist Mason Weaver (Brie Larson), they will explore the uncharted Skull Island.

Its ecosystem is filled with so many bizarre creatures, including house-sized spiders and ancient-looking avians, that the sight of the towering Kong is almost comforting. Turns out he’s a god to the locals (the Iwis), who depend on him to kill the hideous creatures known as Skullcrawl­ers. All this we learn from that aforementi­oned paratroope­r, Hank Marlow (an endearing John C. Reilly), who’s been stranded here since 1944.

“Kong: Skull Island” is directed with such vigor by Jordan Vogt-Roberts (this is only his second film) that we can forgive the somewhat sketchy screenplay by Dan Gilroy and others. It isn’t clear why Packard becomes so obsessed with killing Kong (“Man is king!” he bellows), nor why Kong feels so tenderly toward Mason (it seems to be just a tradition that started with Fay Wray). There’s also the question of whether Hiddleston and Larson have enough chemistry to carry us through the inevitable sequels. Still, who cares when you’re watching such a thrilling mash-up of “Godzilla” and “Apocalypse Now”? Stay through the closing credits to see what other famous cinematic monsters are on their way.

‘KONG: SKULL ISLAND’ 3.5 out of 4 stars. RATED: PG-13 (numerous gruesome deaths). LENGTH: 2 hours.

 ?? Warner Bros. Pictures ?? n Samuel L. Jackson appears in a scene from "Kong: Skull Island."
Warner Bros. Pictures n Samuel L. Jackson appears in a scene from "Kong: Skull Island."

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