Konga

1961 "Not since "King Kong"...has the screen exploded with such mighty fury and spectacle!"
Konga
4.5| 1h30m| en| More Info
Released: 01 January 1961 Released
Producted By: Merton Park Studios
Country: United States of America
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
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Synopsis

Dr. Decker returns from Africa after a year, presumed dead. In that year, he discovered a way of growing plants and animals to an enormous size. He brings back a baby chimpanzee to test out his theory. As he has many enemies at home, he decides to use his chimp, 'Konga', to 'get rid of them'. Then Konga grows to gigantic proportions and wreaks havoc all over London!

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JasparLamarCrabb After being lost in the wilds of Uganda for a year and a half, insane botany professor Michael Gough returns to London and creates a serum that allows his pet chimp Konga to grow to astronomical sizes. The chimp, who somehow grows and becomes a gorilla(!), then does Gough's evil bidding, killing off his enemies and any potential threats to his scientific glory. A pretty dumb film directed by John Lemont and featuring a typically high strung performance by Gough. The special effects are not very special and Lemont wisely films most of Konga's rampaging in such darkness, you really can't see much. It's all a dull hybrid of HG Wells, Robert Louis Stevenson and KING KONG. The supporting cast includes Margo Johns as Gough's assistant/lover, Claire Gordon as a nubile botany student and pop singer Jess Conrad plays "Bob." Steven Berkoff is listed in the credits as one of Gough's student. The shrill music is by Gerard Schurmann.
Spikeopath Konga is directed by John Lemont and written by Herman Cohen and Aben Kandel. It stars Michael Gough, Margo Johns, Jess Conrad, Claire Gordon and Austin Trevor. A SpectaMation/Eastman Color production, with music by Gerard Schurmann and cinematography by Desmond Dickinson.Doctor Decker (Gough) returns from Uganda after a year having been presumed killed in an aeroplane crash. During his time in the jungle he befriended a young chimpanzee he named Konga, who he has brought back to London with him. Oh and he also discovered a serum that grows plants and animals to enormous sizes...Some Konga fans want you to believe it's a fun movie, that sometimes you got to just run with these things and enjoy an exploitation cinematic lobotomy. The trouble is is that there simply is nothing fun about Konga, if you take away Gough's mental Mr. Angry performance and Schurmann's rambunctious score, the rest of the film is insultingly bad. Giving The Phantom from 10,000 Leagues a run for its money as most pointless sci-fi horror schlocker going.Man in monkey suit tears through a cardboard erected London and throws dolls about. Now it could have worked, many a creature feature from the 50s got by using minimal props and budget, but those films had directors who knew how to film certain scenes and kept the phony shots to a minimum. But as the matte madness approaches, in a whirl of bad acting and bad dialogue that's scented with a whiff of misogyny, it's too painful to even laugh at. 2/10
museumofdave It's A Gorilla film, folks! Whether its Kong or Konga, Mighty Joe Young or The Ape, I love gorilla movies, especially the kind where men in cloddish hairy suits lunge around the streets terrifying entire populations. This is one of those--a totally inept mad scientist movie that maintains momentum through sheer foolishness, complete with foaming beakers in the lab, human dreams of world domination, strange murders late at night, and best of all, a gorilla that just gets larger with every injection. This is a silly romp, filmed in bright pastels, and riddled with clichéd dialogue. I had fun, and if you like this sort of thing, you probably will, too. This film and The Little Shop of Horrors were made in the 1960s. and both feature overgrown carnivorous plants with strange appetites for human flesh. What was it about 1960, anyway? It must have been the something in the water!
Prichards12345 Complete review of a deathless masterpiece......Good old Michael Gough, first seen carrying a chimp unhindered through customs, he soon departs for his house, in which every room seems to be painted green. Gough then accidentally smashes his growth serum on the floor of his lab, proceding to shoot his cat when he licks it up. "We can't have a cat the size of a leopard roaming around London!" After a few injections the tiny chimp Konga turns into a bloke in a gorilla suit, aided by a "wavy line" screen effect, and is promptly hypnotised by The Goughster, looking extremely stoned when the process is finished. "Nobody in the world suspects how close we are!" Gough then has Konga off the Dean of his college, probably for being a baldy annoyance. His ultimate goal is to "Change the shape of human beings",and to this aim he has a greenhouse full of rubber carnivorous plants. Some bloke with a tea towel on his head turns up as a rival to Gough's scientific theories, and Konga kills him on his master's orders, too. The Great Gough also takes his students on field trips to study mosses and ferns, which is extremely interesting. Cue a blink and you'll miss it jazz radio sequence in the back of the van with the students, who all look about 35. Of course it being Britain it p**ses down. Despite offering to marry his secretary, who is fully aware he's a murderer, Gough also puts the moves on one of his students; "He's old enough to be your father!" His love rival, a truly terrible actor in a natty blue pullover chins The Goughmeister, which is probably a bad idea when he's got a gorilla for a bessie mate. "You'll probably have me expelled for this." Nah, not when gooney-eyed Konga can unconvincingly choke you as you're trying to start your Vespa! "Here, Konga!" Of course the law is useless as usual. The big revelation is when we see Gough having his breakfast in a purple-painted kitchen - it's not all green! "It's shocking" says his sec/lover, presumably referring to the multiple murders rather than the decor, although I could be wrong. "Destroy Konga? But why?" Er, he's a homicidal gorilla, responsible for 3 killings luv.70 mins gone. Still no giant Konga in sight. Gough decides to ditch his secretary for the 30 year old teenage student he's got the hots for. The sec rebels, sticking about 45 pints of serum into Konga. And at last the Gough starts overacting. Konga chucks a plastic doll that looks nothing like the woman around and then bursts out of the house, picking up the Gough on the way - Yaaaay! The local Trumpton fire bobbies arrive about 15 seconds later. Konga goes on a non-rampage, carrying an Action Man. "There's a huge monster gorilla thats constantly growing loose in the streets" says the inspector. A1 for observation, then. Konga, still looking stoned, refuses to lower the Gough. Lots of extras run into the camera, desperately trying to get away. Shock horror, Konga makes for Big Ben, the only part of the UK most Americans recognise.....Having spent 10 minutes going "Urgh, arrgh," while stuck in Konga's grasp, Gough struggles to no avail. The army, deploying outside the "Famous for Shoes" store, arrive in what looks like 2 diddymen trucks and promptly open fire, missing completely from a distance of about 10 yards. Poor Gough gets chucked at them. Konga dies, even though every tracer bullet has gone wide of the mark, falls over next to Gough, and reverts back to chimp size, arrrh! The final shot has Gough lying next to his tragic creation. What a classic! 4 stars for the sheer cheek of the thing!