Top cast:Kathlyn Williams,Charles Clary,Frank Weed
Director:Joe Carnahan
Genre:Crime
Region:Nigeria
Year:2011
Storyline:Aubrey Smith) after being summoned o the palace.She dresses as a man, wearing pants, a shirt with a stiff white collar, and a wide-brimmed hat.Her face is finally revealed after a long entrance sequence as she strides in (with her wo giant mastiffs) and bounds up the steep staircase.She is singing to herself: "So happy." He finds it ironic hat she is "well-read, well-dressed" and "snoozing away on a public street" like a drunk.It would also destroy Russian submarines and any planes on the ground, and mobilize US fighters to destroy the remaining airborne jets.When released, it broke all previous box-office records.Its massive, money-making success helped to save RKO Studios from bankruptcy.The following scenes for the 1938 re-release (the film was re-released four times from 1933 to 1952 - in 1938, 1942 and 1946), that were excised by censors after the Production Code took effect in 1934, were restored in more recent editions of the film:the Brontosaurus"" killing (biting) of three sailor victims in the swamp (instead of five in the original)Kong""s stripping/peeling of Fay Wray""s clothing (and sniffing) while holding her unconscious in his palmKong""s killing of natives on a scaffold in the village, and the stomping of a native during the attackKong""s chewing-biting of a New Yorker victim and his drop of a woman from the Empire State Building window after mistaking her for AnnThe giant spider-pit sequence was not restored, but lost (during the filming of Peter Jackson""s 2005 remake, he recreated he sequence using remaining stills and animations from the original script).[Note: Hiller had passed up the opportunity to work onThe Godfather (1972)to make this film.] The melodramatic and ragic soap-opera, tremendously popular and a financial success (the top-earning film of the year at $106 million) but panned by critics for its sappy content, was based upon Erich Segal""s # 1 best-selling short novel of the same name, released appropriately on Valentine""s Day in 1970.