Kong Fabrication Area…

This upper torso is foam, and it was carved from large square blocks. The amount of foam being used is amazing. Every concept begins with foam. Foam is the base to make impressions. Once ready and carved, it gets assembled to a steel frame. This frame will hold all Kong’s body parts together. The trees, the mountains, detailed parts of the Great Wall all have foam somewhere inside the finished product.

Komo sambe kong kong!
Woo wooo woo
He lived in the jungle where he was born the king
His great strength made him lord of everything
No creature crossed his path and lived for long
His name, so legend tells us, was king kong
His height was never measured but was great
The jungle shook beneath his mighty weight
His arms were muscled, sturdy as a tree
His chest was thick and wide as it could be
Komo sambe, king kong


Jimmy Castor Bunch-1975

Perfect song to whistle while you work!

Sections 13/1/10/9 and 8 along with sound stages 27/28/29/30 are now assigned to Kong. Section 9 is where Kong forms are assembled for impressions for rubber skin covering. Impressions and molding are done here by effects artists.

We begin on an old corrugated steel fence:

There are the usual yet distinctive sounds that only kids like me quickly identify with. It’s the sound of tennis shoes climbing up a corrugated steel fence. It’s a quick pitter patter when performed by skilled climbers, and Danny and I are classified as such.

On the corner just beyond Overland Avenue, is a climbable old steel fence. With two climbers, it cuts the climbing time in half. It is located just across from Winchell’s Donuts on one corner. It is directly across from my financial institution, better known as Coast Savings. It’s a sidewalk and fence I have traversed back and forth to school my entire life. The other side of the fence here doubles as a storage area. This dirt area long ago had jungle villages and ship docks. They were removed decades ago. The last thing I saw filmed here was a helicopter take off. It was in the opening scene of The Phantom of Hollywood. That was three years ago, now big things are taking place in this same area.

This is how they carve the foam to make impressions for the rubber face.

We’re talking things that can be seen protruding above an area with a two-story fence. An orange figure can be seen towering above this old rusty, studio storage area. The MGM auction in 1970 staged out of this area, selling items of every size, shape and era. It’s the land time forgot. But this area is more significant now than it most likely ever was or could have been. Kong is being created back in this corner of the MGM main lot numbered ONE! Tiny holes tease us. We press our eyes against these portholes. We try to figure out what’s happening on the other side of this fence. Two holes occupied with one blue eye (mine) and one brown eye (Danny’s). Our torsos now block the afternoon sunlight rays from shining through these ancient studio fence protrusions.

Where did I park?

Eventually foam carvings will turn into a rubber, horse hair covered, mechanical robot. The amount of hydraulics needed is similar to a jumbo jet.

“I climbed in over at the Logan’s Run billboard,” I tell Danny. “It’s the old easy fence, no sharp edges, but we will use the push me- pull you method of entry.” Nothing more needs to be said. The temptation of seeing the front side of this giant head and shouldered orange creature is worth the simple risks. These risks could always come out of nowhere. We stop at the corner. We decide to buy some donuts at Winchell’s. The shop’s back door looks up at Kong. Its side door has a view of where we’re going to climb in. This is the official donut shop for all things Kong. I order my usual chocolate chip with sprinkles and an orange frosted donut.

I can see this figure as I select my donuts…

Satisfied, we exit this popular donut shop and cross the street to our front lot entry point. As we get to the billboard promoting Logan’s Run, we prepare to enter. With just one guy, this climb is complicated. You must find places to get a foothold. Hold the edge of the billboard with pictures of actors we met last year on Lot 2. Welcome to my world.

Danny and I take one last look at the intersection and the parking lot of the donut shop. The Culver City Police live at this donut shop. We don’t want to hit the fence with cops eating donuts and drinking coffee across the way. We time it just right. When the coast is clear, Danny cups his hands together. I put one shoe in the palm of his hand. He lifts me upwards, and I secure myself by standing on a fence cross brace. I can now reach down and pull Danny to the top by pulling on his left arm, like a rope. This process takes 10 seconds. We practiced this. We use this technique all the time on these old-style steel and wood fences.

With the sound of a double thump, we touch down inside MGM lot 1. We take cover behind the first things we see. These happen to be trees. Well, they’re going to be, now they’re just metal reinforced shapes in need of skin. Everything needs skin. Kong stands ever present, as if he’s the only head here that has spotted us. One arm is attached as a second foam arm is being put together like a large toy set. Cranes lift oversized parts, Danny and I joke, “Every crane operator in the world seems to work here now.” I had no idea how important cranes are to shows of this magnitude. After a brief cooling off, we sit between haunted looking trees and stage pit covers in this makeshift storage area. We can hear robust Italian dialects that seem to be leading this crusade. We feel safe because we were not seen climbing in. We sit on a pit cover and prop our legs on a foam log.

Foam log footstool…

As we stare upwards at the beast, our minds process what we see, and what we expected to see. He’s orange, like the donut I’m eating, and stiff, like he could blow over. The Italian voices below Kong have a table with various items. These are likely tech prints. Next to that is a coffee pot, along with donuts and water. We laugh as we realize, Winchell’s is going to make a mint off this show.

Some assembly required applies to this toy. We see forms and conclude this is a mold to make impressions. This isn’t the celebrity Kong that we see here. It’s just a stand-in used to fabricate the rubber skin. This rubber skin will be applied to the mechanical version of this same Ape. That version must be stationed somewhere else. This is where impressions are being made, like my dentist whose office is just down the street. With clarity now on what’s going on in this fabrication zone and this frontier/storage area we exit lot 1. Culver City’s skyline is changing rapidly. There are 40 ft apes, 60 ft walls that stretch from here to eternity, and large body parts strewn around. They are like puzzle pieces.

The backlot is even more active. We enter the backlot through a sharp fence. This fence folds like an accordion when nails are removed. Yes, we too have our own main gate. It’s concealed simply by turning a twisted nail that holds it shut. Because of this, it goes unnoticed.

Our gate is behind the Filmways Building. New York Street sprawls in every direction through the glass windows inside this old cartoon building. Danny and I take a break from Kong. We step away from all this preproduction activity. We relax in still plush seats in one of two theaters inside this building. Only a few refracted and stray sunlight rays illuminate the aisle. They lead to a row of luxurious seats where we recline.

This building will have a strategic value attached to it. It’s directly across from Kong fabrication that takes place across the public street named Overland.

Like we own the place, we sit comfortably and stare at a blank screen. It’s as silent as anywhere now on this lot. We imagine Tom and Jerry cartoons playing again, in the dark environment time forgot. We wonder if the last patrons ever to see screenings here knew what the future would hold. The ending credits that were last up on the screen were truly –The End. It’s been abandoned for years; the building has held up well. It has filing cabinets in most of the offices that wrap around the upstairs spaces. The basement contains the theaters. We feel like producers, whoever this Dino De Laurentiis guy is, we love him. Not only has he saved our backlot, but he’s also adding possibly the best chapter ever to its existence.

Arrivederci to you… Mr. Italian producer guy! “

This dark theater stimulates our imagination. We just went to Laserium last week at the Griffith Park Observatory. Danny and I reconjure up some color trails still in our mind. We sink into these reclining seats. Danny provides the Greg Lake drums on the back of the seat in front of his. The song from ELPKarn Evil 9 is captured in partial gray smoke effects. This is opposed to a laser light bombardment. Simple smoke exhaust from our lungs creates images, Danny creates sounds, as we immerse ourselves into full-tilt psychedelia.

You’ve got to see the show, it’s rock and roll.

No truer words have ever been spoken. MGM still delivers the goods, even over 50 years after these gates first opened!

The 23rd Century

This story is in my Book Two-“The Uninvited Visitor”

A very special moment on the set of ...King Kong

All activity on the lot indicates to me Kong is close to ready. However, sneaking in Lot 1 is dangerous. The MGM guards all know me. They know I don’t belong on this set or lot…Period!

However, I need to see where we’re at, like some producer kid. It’s time to pay Little Italy a visit. But first, I’m getting a couple of donuts, one orange iced, the other, a Kong cream pie. It’s a specialty donut, in honor of the Great Ape, being dressed just across the street. This donut shop, as is this city itself, is all things Kong.

It’s across this street I’m headed next. I have my little bag of delights. I need to climb a fence. A billboard of Logan’s Run proudly displays itself there. Poor Farrah. She is getting shoe marks all over her face. Her skimpy outfit is marked too on her section of this advertisement board. It’s the only spot I can get over at… sorry Farrah!

First, I hold my breath and close my eyes. Then, I toss this tiny donut package over the sign. I hope it floats softly like a balloon, limiting damage.

23rd Century -Get in spot for MGM Lot 1

I’m next. After grabbing one hand hold, my tennis shoes slip and slide. They glide like a cartoon on this extra-large movie poster. My right hand barely clasps the top of the fence. My momentum buys me the extra inches to pull myself up to the top. Then I go over, reuniting with my tiny bag of donuts. I may have just landed in the 23rd Century.

Kong is getting the star treatment and looks like an actor getting finishing touches before hitting the set.

The fabricated tree area has been switched to a rubber hose forest. Miles of hoses or tubes have been cut. They fit inside this massive, formidable 40 ft object. It has been hibernating here for months. He would be just a rubber doll without these arteries for oil to activate all his digits and facial expressions.

Activity is taking place around me at a mesmerizing pace…I find myself in between pit covers, artificial trees, and pallets of rubber hoses towering above me. I appear like Johnny Quest, with donuts!

That’s a fancy car kicking up all that dust…

A long black Mercedes-Benz wheels onto the set. It sends up a cloud of dust as it suddenly stops. I realize the attention all shifts to a dapper man, dressed in attire fit for a producer. I lick orange frosting off my fingers. I stand behind some artificial trees to get a better view of this person of interest. This is him, I think to myself, it’s Dino…

Everybody stares at the car, waiting for the great man, the producer, to emerge. Even King Kong stares, impassive, his giant ape face frozen 40 feet above the car. After a couple of seconds, the producer, Dino De Laurentiis, bounces out of the car. There is no doubt that he does this for dramatic effect. He flounces with energy. He pays absolutely no attention to the rest of us on the set – about 50 people. Looking up, he locks eyes with King Kong. He is here to see the giant monkey. De Laurentiis doesn’t even glance at the maybe three dozen special effects people who are swarming over Kong. Several of them take up positions at big instrument consoles. Each console has a series of levers that control hydraulic valves within Kong.

Slowly, gradually, I hear the hum of electricity. Then the whoosh of valves. Kong is coming to life… Maybe. Dino De Laurentiis has come to see the beast move. And it better move and move well. The Hollywood Press has been hinting at problems with the giant hairy star of the movie. Rumors suggest that the whole movie is at risk. And that is no small risk. It’s 1976. The $30 million budget for King Kong makes it the most expensive film in history at this point. Many people in Los Angeles think De Laurentiis’ remake of the 1933 classic starring Fay Wray is a folly. They believe this because the original is such an iconic movie. Additionally, they think no movie should cost $30 million and depend so much on unproven, untried special effects.

Giant jungle robots, indeed. Many movie insiders in ultra-competitive Hollywood are happy. They take not-so-secret delight at the prospect of seeing De Laurentiis fall flat on his face. He is the flamboyant Italian interloper. De Laurentiis is moving to the United States. He had a career in Italy. His work focused on spaghetti Westerns and niche films like Barbarella. He also worked on derivative, knockoff spy and gangster movies. Some people think De Laurentiis is too big for his riding britches. Remaking King Kong could be his Icarus moment. It is the moment when he flies too close to the Hollywood sun.

De Laurentiis is looking less than cocky at this moment. He looks worried, his eyes never straying from Kong’s as he stands a few feet from his car, waiting. I’m enthralled, this is a very big moment in this film. He doesn’t speak. He doesn’t need to. Men scramble, levers are pulled, hums and wheezes and whooshes get louder. Is the big ape going to come alive for the big cheese?

Dino De Laurentiis…

Kong’s ears wiggle. There is a murmur on the set, but nobody shouts or cheers. Nobody says anything. Everyone is concentrating so much on the big robot that I can step out of my hiding place. I just turned 16. I am not supposed to be anywhere on this studio lot. I definitely should not be here on the tightly closed, high-security set of the biggest movie ever. This is happening during a critical special effects test. I am about half a football field away from De Laurentiis. I am next to the jungle scenery that has been my hiding place.

Kong blinks, slowly. This is promising. But the robot needs the capability to make much more complicated movements with its arms and legs. He must look real – and huge, and menacing – on the screen. If Kong moves like a robot, the movie will be not only a flop, but a laughingstock.

Slowly, Kong’s left arm rises, a little. He blinks again. His head turns left. His head turns right. His partially raised left hand is in a fist. Slowly, the ape’s massive fingers, the size of a real Gorilla’s legs, start to unfurl. I sneak a quick glance over at the Mercedes, and De Laurentiis is starting to smile.

Kong raises his left hand higher, so his hand is chest high, palm toward his chest. I suppose if you know how a 40-foot gorilla would move, the robot’s movements look pretty natural. Kong extends all four fingers and his thumb, so his palm is facing his chest. Amid more wheezes and whooshes and buzzes, slowly Kong folds his thumb in. Then his pointer finger, ring finger, and little finger. His middle finger remains extended.

King Kong is giving Dino De Laurentiis the bird.

Re-creation – photo.

The set erupts in cheers and shouts and laughter. I eat my cream filled Kong donut as Kong stares down, paralyzed. He passed his audition, barely… People clap, and so does De Laurentiis. With a cigar in his mouth, Dino flips the bird at his creation. He smiles as he exhales a plume of tobacco toward his leading man. This is the moment it’s become clear that the King Kong remake would become a mega-hit. This time it stars Jessica Lange in her first film role, along with Jeff Bridges. The film is released at the end of this year. I can feel it, all this hard work is culminated in this magical moment.

As fate would have it, after the exchange of gestures, everything is green-lighted to move to the backlot. The largest scenes yet remain to be filmed. Kong stands proudly with his finger extended over the Italy assembly area, I see everyone laughing and celebrating by smoking. The only one not smoking is me and Kong.

As the thrill of victory wears off, Dino leaves in a cloud of dust, excited as Dr. Frankenstein when his monster came to life before his eyes.

Kong stays in the same position, not contorting even for a moment to wave farewell. It turns out, this demo was like test driving a used car. Our hero has a hydraulic leak in the miles of rubber hose inside. This leak has depleted our star of the life blood. It’s needed to pump his massive joints. He’s not broken, just leaking oil. like some old used car.

Don’t worry-I’m hiding behind stacks of rubber Kong hydraulic tubing sitting on a sea of pallets…

Kong will maintain this posture until the leaking section is identified. It needs to be replaced. I’m not sure if Dino caught wind that Kong’s hand is stuck after he left the test range…

As we say in Little Italy…cambio olio -sprigati, sprigati, –Ti stiamo aspettando!

Welcome to Hollywood fellas, Winchell’s donuts is across the street, you still got a lot of work to do…

I better get out of here, Little Italy needs to cut up more rubber hose, Pronto!