Films should create a world that makes sense. Underlying
rules (natural or human-made) and logic should govern the environment in which
characters live and make decisions. In the recent film Kong: Skull Island (2017; dir. Jordan Vogt-Roberts), an expedition is undertaken to a remote South
Pacific island encircled by storm clouds. There are rumors about the island,
but no one has ever visited. At least no one who has escaped. An eccentric rich
man played by John Goodman believes that huge creatures from prehistoric times still
exist there. He convinces the federal government to help him finance an
expedition and takes a crew of scientists and photographers with him. One
member of his crew is a geologist who believes in the hollow earth theory. This
is the film’s explanation for the various
monsters who appear: they live in empty spaces beneath the surface of the
earth. Makes a lot of sense, right? The military escort is commanded by Samuel L.
Jackson, who has a reputation for being hard-nosed and for never leaving a man
behind on the battlefield.
Six helicopters take off from the expeditionary ship and fly
through severe weather towards the island. They fly through canyons and over
mountains that it's difficult to imagine an island such as this could accommodate.
But, okay. We can accept that. What we cannot accept is that when a huge hundred-foot
tall ape suddenly begins attacking the helicopters, instead of taking evasive
action, they continue on straight towards him, so that within a short time he has knocked
all six helicopters to the ground. Many crew members are killed. Only a few survive. Not surprisingly, the
survivors include the principal members of the cast.
Let us call the ape Kong.
No one in the film actually refers to him as Kong, but his name is in
the title. At times in the film Kong
seems to be much taller than 100 feet tall. At other times 100 feet seems about
right. But the relationship of Kong to the humans who are pursuing him is
inconsistent in terms of perspective. Sometimes he is large. Sometimes he is small.
At one point he rescues the photographer who's on the expedition (played by
Brie Larson, one of the few highlights of the film) and holds her unconscious
body in his hand. She's a tiny figure and his hand is huge, suggesting that he
should be much taller than 100 feet. But this inconsistency, this point of illogic,
doesn't really seem to matter. Obviously, it bothered me.
It's not really clear what the expedition members expect to
find on the island. Once they arrive, their main concern becomes survival. They
have to reach the north side of the island in three days so they can be rescued.
But Kong is angry that they've invaded his space and dropped bombs and shot
at him numerous times. Only gradually do the members of the expedition (some of
them, at least) realize that he is actually defending a tribe of natives who
live on the island. How the natives got there, we don't know. They’re Asian, they don't talk much, and
they cover their bodies with tattoos.
The expedition's military escort, commanded by
Jackson, who never leaves a man behind, wants revenge on Kong, who killed many
of its men. Jackson sets himself up as an Ahab: the ape is his whale. In
various moments, he stares at Kong in the distance with a gaze of intense
hatred. He wants to kill Kong. Kong wants to return the favor. The scientists
want to save Kong because he is, in the end, only defending himself and his
territory and the natives. What does he defend the natives against? Skull-faced
lizards, of course--huge and vicious, always hungry, and fundamentally unconvincing:
they’re clearly studio creations. Even
Kong looks like a man in an ape suit, though the director assures us that he's
a digital creation. Maybe the digital creation of a man in an ape suit.
Of the monsters in this film, I noted a huge spider who
lives in the forest. Kong fights a huge octopus which lurks in a lake. Don’t forget the skull-faced lizard
monsters. There is a huge water buffalo, and I mean huge. Pterodactyls fly
around at various moments. Maybe I've missed a few creatures. These all came,
apparently, from the hollow earth.
This is the kind of film one looks to for mindless diversion.
Watching it, I spent my time hating it and thinking of how I needed to go to
sleep.
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