The King Kong Show


King Kong, commonly referred to as The King Kong Show, is an American-Japanese-Canadian animated television series produced by Videocraft International and Toei Animation. ABC ran the series in the United States on Saturday mornings between September 6, 1966, and March 4, 1967. It is the first animated series produced in Japan for an American company.
This series is an animated adaptation of the famous film monster King Kong with character designs by Jack Davis and Rod Willis. It is also the first animated series in the King Kong franchise.

Plot summary

In this series, the giant ape named Kong befriends the Bond family, with whom he goes on various adventures, fighting monsters, robots, aliens, mad scientists and other threats. Unlike his counterpart from original 1933 film, Kong is a protector of humanity.

''Tom of T.H.U.M.B.''

Included with King Kong is Tom of T.H.U.M.B., a parody of spy films of the 1960s called Tom of T.H.U.M.B., about a secret agent for T.H.U.M.B. named Tom and his Asian sidekick Swinging Jack, who are accidentally reduced by a shrinking laser ray gun to tall. The pair are sent out in a variety of miniature vehicles by their bad-tempered boss Chief Homer J. Chief to foil the fiendish plots of M.A.D., an evil organization made up of black-hatted and black-cloaked scientists "bent on destroying the world for their own gains".

Cast and characters

King Kong is the titular giant ape. Kong was discovered on Mondo Island by Bobby Bond, whom he saved from being eaten by a Tyrannosaurus rex. He saved Bond family from other disasters afterward. Since then, he has become the family's mascot and a hero.Professor Carl Bond is the head and father of the Bond family. He is the basis for Rhodes Reason's character Commander Carl Nelson in King Kong Escapes.Susan Bond is Carl's teenage daughter. She is somewhat perplexed by Bobby and Kong's friendship and always the one that knows what Who is up to, Her fear is dreaming about snakes. She is the basis for Linda Jo Miller's character Susan Watson in King Kong Escapes.Bobby Bond is Carl's young son and Kong's closest companion. Bobby is saved by Kong from being eaten by a Tyrannosaurus rex and they are friends since then.Captain Englehorn is Carl's ship captain and a friend to the family. He is based on the character of the same name from the original 1933 King Kong film and its sequel.Dr. Who is a bald, big-headed, and bespectacled mad scientist who wants to capture Kong and use him for his own evil schemes. Despite his name, he has no relation to Doctor Who. He is the basis for Hideyo Amamoto's character of the same name in King Kong Escapes.Mechani-Kong is a mecha modeled after Kong, invented by Who, who operates it via a control room in the mecha's head. Neither the Bonds nor Englehorn ever knows that Who invented it. It appears in two King Kong segments, "MechaniKong" and "Anchors Away". Each segment features a different version of Mechani-Kong. It is also Kong's archenemy in King Kong Escapes.

Crew

List of episodes

Starting with the second episode, each episode begins with a six-minute King Kong segment, followed by a six-minute Tom of T.H.U.M.B. segment, and then a second six-minute King Kong segment.
  1. "King Kong". In American syndication, the episode was split into two parts, which were titled "A Friend in Need" and "The Key to the City".
  2. "Under the Volcano" / "For the Last Time, Feller...I'm Not Bait!" / "The Treasure Trap"
  3. "The Horror of Mondo Island" / "Hey, That Was A Close One World!" / "Dr. Who"
  4. "Rocket Island" / "I Was A oz. Weakling 'Till One Day..." / "The African Bees"
  5. "The Hunter" / "I Was A Starling for the USA!" / "The Space Men"
  6. "The Jinx of the Sphinx" / "Cool Nerves and...Steady Hands" / "The Greeneyed Monster"
  7. "The Top of the World" / "All Guys from Outer Space are Creeps" / "The Golden Temple"
  8. "The Electric Circle" / "Mechanical Granma" / "Mirror of Destruction"
  9. "Tiger Tiger" / "The Day We Almost Had It" / "The Vise of Dr. Who"
  10. "King Kong's House" / "Tom Makes History" / "MechaniKong"
  11. "The Giant Sloths" / "Tom Scores Again" / "The Legend of Loch Ness"
  12. "Dr. Bone" / "Blow, Jack, Blow!" / "No Man's Snowman"
  13. "The Desert Pirates" / "Tom and the TV Pirates" / "Command Performance"
  14. "The Sea Surrounds Us" / "The Girl from M.A.D." / "Show Biz"
  15. "The Wizard of Overlord" / "Just One of Those Nights" / "Perilous Porpoise"
  16. "The Trojan Horse" / "Runt of 1,000 Faces" / "The Man from K.O.N.G."
  17. "Caribbean Cruise" / "Hello, Dollies!" / "Diver's Dilemma"
  18. "The Great Sun Spots" / "Pardner" / "Kong is Missing"
  19. "In the Land of the Giant Trees" / "Beans is Beans" / "Captain Kong"
  20. "Statue of Liberty Play" / "What Goes Up..." / "Pandora's Box"
  21. "Thousand Year Knockout" / "Our Man, the Monster" / "Desert City"
  22. "Eagle Squadron" / "Never Trust A Clam" / "The Kong of Stone"
  23. "Murderer's Maze" / "Drop that Ocean, Feller" / "The Great Gold Strike"
  24. "It Wasn't There Again Today" / "Plug that Leak" / "The Mad Whale"
  25. "King Kong Diamond" / "The Scooby" / "Anchors Away"

Music

The theme music for the series was recorded in London, England, in 1965, using primarily British studio musicians. Canadian conductor, vocalist and former Kitchener-Waterloo Record entertainment columnist Harry Currie provided vocal talent on the recording.

Release

In Japan, the first two episodes were combined into a 56-minute special, titled King of the World: The King Kong Show, and was broadcast on NET (now TV Asahi) on December 31, 1966. The rest of the series, with the inclusion of Tom of T.H.U.M.B., was broadcast on NET as 'King Kong &, and aired from April 5 to October 4, 1967, with a total of 25 episodes.
On November 15, 2005, Sony Wonder released the first eight episodes on two DVD releases titled King Kong: The Animated Series Volume 1 and King Kong: The Animated Series Volume 2. The pilot episode was included, in its two parts for American syndication, between the two DVDs.

Reception

In the 2007 book Comics Gone Ape! The Missing Link to Primates in Comics, comics historian Michael Eury writes: "The Rankin/Bass King Kong was an early case of identity theft, where the Kong name was appropriated to describe a new character that, at best, only remotely resembled his namesake. This was Kong done wrong".

Legacy

This series was successful enough for Rankin/Bass to extend the Kong franchise to another Japanese company, Toho. This resulted in two films: Ebirah, Horror of the Deep and King Kong Escapes, which was based on The King Kong Show.