Pages

Monday, March 13, 2017

Movie Review - Kong: Skull Island

I had a choice last Friday to see Logan, Shin Godzilla, or Kong: Skull Island as a cheap morning show. Logan started too early, actually, and I've heard Shin Godzilla is decent but a bit slow, so I opted for Kong.

Obligatory Warning: Is there cursing in the movie? A little, but your kids probably won't notice unless they're already swearing when you're not around to hear it.

On to the movie. It's a giant monster movie, so you shouldn't really expect an amazing, painstakingly crafted plot, or fully three-dimensional characters. You basically go to these things to see the monsters destroying things and fighting other big monsters, and the human cast trying to survive. And that's what you get. It's not the worst giant monster film I've ever seen, but it's not the best, either. There are plot holes large enough for the star attraction to walk through, unnecessary characters, inconsistent characters, and cheesy dialogue. I was entertained well enough by the CGI spectacle, but some of the other choices made with the production of this film left me nonplussed.

The good points revolve around Kong and the various monsters that inhabit Skull Island. The creatures are interestingly designed, and the monster fight scenes are fun. There's a big cast of human characters, many of whom don't make it to the end of the movie (I don't think that counts as a spoiler, because I won't tell you who). Oh, and seeing soldiers thinking they're on their way home from the Vietnam War only to find out they've got one more mission that involves giant monsters? That was well done.

The bad points include the premise for why no one's visited Skull Island before (ridiculous pseudoscience meteorology that might have worked in a 1930's milieu but seems out of place in a movie taking place in 1973). Characters that mysteriously appear with no introduction in Act 2, serve no important plot points, and are pretty much just there taking up space (although one, Jing Tian's character, does provide some nice eye candy and provides a second female character in a very male dominated cast). Oh, and then there are characters who seem to have no idea what sort of work their job descriptions require. There are veteran soldiers who seem to have no sense of strategy or tactics, a photographer who sees a giant creature rise up in front of her party and after a minute remembers to take ONE photo then lowers her camera, scientists who don't really seem to have much background in science...

There were a few interesting things from a world-building perspective that might be inspirational for a game. That's one reason I love B-movies and big budget but stupid films like this. Somewhat tangential to the plot is a Hollow Earth theory to explain where the monsters come from, that could possibly be a set-up for a sequel.*

There's some cool stuff in this film, and while there are lots of weak points I could point out, you do get giant monsters, Samuel L. Jackson/John Goodman/John C. Reilly putting in amusing performances, and people trying to fight kaiju with M16s and M60s. I'm glad I only paid matinee prices to see it so that I don't think it was a waste, but I'm also thinking maybe I should have left home a bit earlier and seen Logan instead.

*Edit - Just found out that I completely missed a post credits scene (I typically stay to the end of the credits regardless, but really had to pee after this one so left early). Also, this movie is in the same fictional universe as the American Godzilla movie produced a couple years ago and IS setting up a sequel.

5 comments:

  1. It's setting up two sequels - the next Godzilla movie, and then a future encounter between Godzilla and Kong.

    ReplyDelete
  2. I thought the weak points buried the good points: 1)No payoff for hollow earth idea or mysterious navy boat attack. 2) Water buffalo on steroids instead of living ancient species. 3) Illogical helicopter action 4) Skull Island natives pushed into background literally 5) Reporter making Kong her pet in 30 seconds 6) Large skullcrawler not any different than smaller ones (breaks with kaiju evolution tradition). TOHO will regret letting hollywood use their monsters.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. This was better than the Hollywood Godzilla from 2-3 years ago. That's a low bar, though...

      Delete
    2. I'd give the Independence Day sequel the low bar. H-Wood is at the rubber fish level, they've fumbled all the classic B-monsters.

      Delete
    3. Haven't seen that one yet. ID was such a melange of appropriated sci-fi that it didn't really impress me that much when it came out. Yeah, it's a fun movie, but all through my first viewing of it, I couldn't stop thinking, "OK, that's War of the Worlds...and that's V...and that's Alien/Aliens...and that's X-Files...and that's Star Wars..." and so on.

      No strong desire to see the sequel.

      Delete