The songs would seem to write themselves: "Skull Island Girl," "Gorilla My Dreams, It's You," "Oe'r the Rampage We Watched," "Take the El Train," "Shock the Huge Monkey," "There's a Broken Bone for Every Light on Broadway," "I'm on an Empire State of Building," and so on.
But sadly, they seem to have taken the idea seriously, with musical numbers like "Kong's Capture" and "Broadway Nightmare" (the latter of which sounds like me having to pay for show tickets).
To be fair, my buddy and his family enjoyed the show, calling it brisk and exciting, with amazing puppet work and other special effects to bring the big hairy title star to life. Hey, spectacle sells, which is kind of the whole point of the original movie -- bringing back the world's most amazing mammal to show him off to the New York crowds.
However, I take issue with the way the play sells itself in its PR materials:
"To her surprise, Ann finds an unexpected kindred spirit in this magnificent, untameable creature. But when Carl hatches a plan to capture Kong and display him to the New York masses, she’s faced with a terrible choice. Will Ann follow the call of her own ambition? Or can she find the strength to stand up for what’s right? Roaring with heart-pounding action, KING KONG is a gripping and spectacular story of unlikely friendship, unshakable courage, and breaking free from the cages others put us in."
So a monstrous, gigantic monkey with poor anger management skills is exactly the same as some guy whose dad wanted him to join the accounting firm or some teen girl whose mom didn't want her to get nose ring.
Kong, having broken free from the cages other put him in. |
And definitely don't try it with King Kong. He didn't get to be king by holding elections.
4 comments:
Someone once advised me to never own a pet you couldn't kill in hand-to-hand combat. I guess Siegfried and Roy prove the efficacy of that notion.
Yeah, that Roy mauled Siegfried more than a few times. ;>
I'm pretty sure I could take the big dog, Tralfaz, if he turns on me, but Nipper fights dirty.
See Greg Gutfeld's "Animals are great" videos.
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