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Monday, July 13, 2026

King Kong: A Comparison

Few movie monsters have endured like King Kong, the giant ape who has captured audiences for generations. From groundbreaking stop-motion to modern CGI, each version has brought something different to the legend. Let’s compare the three films that introduced us to the Eighth Wonder of the World

Somewhere in the South Pacific, there is an island shrouded in fog, home to King Kong, the Eighth Wonder of the World. It is a place of wonder and terror, one that speaks to the child in all of us. In my mind, there is no greater cinematic monster than Kong. Keep your sparkly vampires and chainsaw-toting psychopaths. None of them can touch the sheer power and majesty of a giant ape standing atop a jungle kingdom. So let’s journey back through the ages and take a look at the three films that gave us a girl, an ape, and one very unfortunate island.

 

King Kong (1933)

In 1933, Merian C. Cooper and Ernest B. Schoedsack created a film that would change cinema forever, pushing fantasy adventure into bold new territory and effectively birthing a genre. There are many iconic images in film history, from the birth of Frankenstein’s monster to Charlton Heston parting the Red Sea, but few match the grandeur of a giant ape atop the Empire State Building, swatting at attacking airplanes. Kong himself was brought to life through the groundbreaking stop-motion animation of Willis H. O’Brien, and it left audiences stunned. It truly felt like witnessing the Eighth Wonder of the World. The only surprising thing about its success is that, after one rather limp sequel, it took so long for anyone to take another crack at it.

king-kong-1976-poster 

King Kong (1976)

Jump ahead to 1976, when director John Guillermin and producer Dino De Laurentiis decided to ditch stop-motion and instead put Rick Baker in an ape suit, placing him and Jessica Lange atop the World Trade Center. It did not quite have the same magic. Then, roughly thirty years later, Hollywood tried again, this time with considerably more success.

 

King Kong (2005)

Peter Jackson’s version returned Kong to the 1930s, where he belongs, though sadly he does not get to swat any elevated trains. With the help of modern CGI, the filmmakers breathed new life into the story, though arguably they breathed a little too much life into it. Both the original and Jackson’s version are set during the Great Depression, but while Cooper was telling a contemporary story that offered escapism to audiences of the time, Jackson had to choose between updating the story or embracing it as a period piece. Thankfully, he chose wisely.

King-Kong-Composite 

Kong destroying New York City’s elevated train totally dates the film.

The 1976 remake went in the opposite direction. Dino De Laurentiis wanted a big-budget contemporary spectacle, so we got Kong stomping through 1970s New York City. This decision is a major reason the film struggles. By updating the story, much of the magic is lost. Greedy oil executives replace adventurous filmmakers, and the sense of myth gives way to corporate cynicism. On top of that, it becomes very hard to believe that a modern police force would have much trouble dealing with a giant ape. In 1976, local street gangs probably had enough firepower to handle the situation. Yet at one point, when Kong wades across the Hudson, the military somehow manages to lose track of him.

Note: In fairness, the authorities also lost track of the Rhedosaurus in The Beast from 20,000 Fathoms, so perhaps cities are more confusing than they look.

Paramount should have realized that some stories do not survive modernization without straining credibility. It is easy to accept a biplane pilot getting too close to Kong’s grasp in 1933, but what exactly was the helicopter pilot in 1976 thinking when he drifted within arm’s reach? Hovering safely out of range and unloading would have been the obvious move. Instead, he joins the long list of cinematic pilots whose decision-making skills should be studied as a warning.

 

“Maybe I should get a little closer.”

Now for a more direct comparison. In the 1933 and 2005 versions, Carl Denham (Robert Armstrong/Jack Black) is a filmmaker who mounts an expedition to Skull Island in search of Kong, initially to make a movie before pivoting to the “bring him back alive” approach. In 1976, with the world in the grip of an oil crisis, Denham is replaced by Fred Wilson (Charles Grodin), a corporate executive chasing rumours of oil. Denham finds exactly what he set out to find. Wilson, on the other hand, discovers the oil is worthless and decides to haul Kong back as a consolation prize. It is not quite the same level of ambition.

 

Do you think that giant gorilla is hiding our oil?

Their leading ladies arrive under equally different circumstances. Ann Darrow (Fay Wray) is hired for a film role, while Dwan (Jessica Lange) is conveniently found floating in a life raft. Right away, the 1976 version feels like it is leaning on coincidence rather than letting the story unfold naturally.

Once the expedition reaches Skull Island, the differences become even more apparent. In 1933, Denham discovers a massive wall, originally built for the 1927 film The King of Kings, separating the villagers from the dangers beyond. The 1976 version also features a wall, though it looks like something borrowed from a theme resort rather than an ancient structure. Jackson’s film presents a far more convincing ruin, steeped in history. Still, all three versions raise the same question: if the goal is to keep out giant monsters, why include a giant door?

king-kong-4 

Cecil B. DeMille wants his wall back.

Jackson offers a bit of backstory suggesting a time of coexistence, but requiring homework outside the film feels like cheating, so no one gets a pass here. None of the films, however, deserve any credit for their portrayal of the island’s inhabitants, which range from uncomfortable to outright embarrassing.

Once Ann or Dwan is sacrificed to Kong, the films follow a similar structure, except for one glaring omission in 1976: the dinosaurs have apparently taken the day off.

King-Kong-Stegosaurus1-1000x799 

Hey, get out of my movie!

Let’s talk monsters for a while. The 1933 original features a menagerie of prehistoric creatures, including a Stegosaurus, Brontosaurus, Tyrannosaurus Rex, Elasmosaurus, and Pteranodon. By contrast, the 1976 version offers a single oversized snake, and not a particularly convincing one. The jungle trek in the original, while impressive, is not without its quirks. One sailor proudly points out a broken branch as if he is tracking a subtle trail, despite the fact that Kong is the size of a house and has been flattening trees in his path. It does raise the question of how often these sacrifices occur if there are still trees left standing. Do the trees that Kong tramples belong to some peculiar strain of fast-growing plant?

king kong sacrifice 

If not, he really should have a path pretty well beaten down by now.

Paleontologist Note: A couple of the dinosaurs are portrayed in a manner that may confuse today’s more educated audiences.  Both the Stegosaurus and Brontosaurus (more correctly labeled today as an apatosaurus) display behaviour one wouldn’t expect from an herbivore.

Snarl Brontosaurus 

This sailor was nice enough to climb up to the biting level.

Even so, the 1933 film easily outclasses watching a man in an ape suit wrestle a rubber snake. Jackson’s version certainly does not skimp on dinosaurs, especially in the extended cut, but the infamous stampede sequence leans too heavily into excess, with action that borders on the absurd and CGI that struggles to convince.

 

This CGI Jungle Fun is on par with Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull.

It becomes clear that most of the visual effects budget went into Kong himself, leaving the rest of Skull Island feeling less polished. The original’s battle between Kong and the T-Rex remains a masterclass in tension and animation. Jackson attempts to top it by adding two more T-Rexes and staging the fight while dangling from vines in a sequence that feels like a child smashing action figures together. It is over-the-top, though the final moments of the fight still deliver.

 

Once again, certainly better than a guy in an ape suit fighting a lame rubber snake puppet.

As for Kong’s motivations, the original and 1976 films offer little explanation for his fascination with human women. The idea of romance never quite lands. A more plausible theory is that Ann is simply bait. As the dominant force on the island, Kong may use her to lure in other creatures for a fight. After all, once the other animals learn to avoid him, entertainment becomes scarce. Picking up a human and leaving her exposed could be an effective way to draw in an unsuspecting opponent.

king-kong-killing-pterodactyl 

Dinosaurs are notoriously grabby.

That said, the 2005 version handles the relationship far more effectively. Ann begins terrified but gradually comes to understand Kong’s loneliness, creating a bond that feels genuine. Their interactions, particularly the quiet moments, add a layer of emotional depth missing from the earlier films.

anne darrow 2005 

I like my men tall, dark and hairy, so sue me.”

The sacrifice of a woman to a giant ape seems to be a ritual – which both sides seem to have forgotten the original purpose of – and so when Kong hears the drums and sees the lit fires, he heads over to the wall to grab the offering, and it is likely all out of habit more than anything else. Anne is most likely a dead duck – as we see that there is a passel of skeletons just outside the wall belonging to previous sacrifices – but Anne fights back. This intrigues Kong, and so she gets a reprieve.   What follows is a beautiful, but tragic, relationship between a smart and empathetic woman and a beast that has been alone for a very, very long time.  Jackson wins this one.

 

It really is a nice view from up here.”

In the 1933 film, Kong breaks through the gates and rampages through the village – killing all who would stand in his way – until he’s dropped by gas bombs thrown by Denham, while in the 1976 movie, he busts through the door and then immediately falls for the old pit trap trick, where he quickly succumbs to the gas placed inside.  On the other hand, Peter Jackson has his Kong being gassed while sailors try to snare him with grappling hooks, kind of a blend of the new and old, but as fun as this action scene is with Kong tossing sailors around like toys, I didn’t buy for a moment that they ever had a chance at restraining a creature as large and as strong as Kong.  I have to go with the original on this one.

 

Here’s the plan…you tackle the giant ape, and I’ll supervise from over here.

Transporting Kong to New York is another issue all three films conveniently sidestep. The logistics of moving such a creature onto a ship are never addressed. The 1976 film at least shows him confined in a tanker, while the original leaves one wondering how he was managed aboard the Venture, and what exactly they planned to feed him along the way.

kong on stage 

I’d certainly pay $10 Bucks to see that.

Once in New York, each version presents its own questionable business model. The 1933 film offers little detail beyond Kong being displayed on stage. Jackson adds a lavish theatrical production, though it is debatable whether the spectacle would justify the cost of admission. The 1976 version ties Kong to an oil company promotion, which somehow feels both more practical and more absurd at the same time.

king-kong-1976-crown 

Put a gorilla in your tank!

I’m not sure how this campaign would have worked in the long run; the cost of feeding and housing Kong would be enormous, not to mention the cost of fighting off animal rights groups, but it does seem more plausible than people sitting down in a theatre to just stare up at a big ape.  It does seem that Kong would have been more suitable for a zoo attraction rather than a Broadway show, and the big guy certainly wasn’t as talented as his smaller cousin, Mighty Joe Young.

The modern setting continues to hurt the 1976 film during Kong’s rampage. Unlike Godzilla, Kong is not invulnerable, and it is hard to believe he would last long against modern weaponry. In contrast, the earlier setting allows for more suspension of disbelief, especially in Jackson’s version, where Kong is depicted as faster and more agile.

king-kong-05 

Kong shown here disobeying all traffic laws.

The attempt to make Kong more sympathetic in 1976 is admirable but clumsy. The original already conveys that he is a wild animal out of his element. De Laurentiis, however, pushed for a more overt emotional response, resulting in scenes that feel forced. Jackson strikes the right balance, building a believable connection between Ann and Kong that pays off beautifully, particularly in their quiet moments together.

 

Together, these two are magical.

Finally, the special effects highlight the strengths and weaknesses of each film. Willis O’Brien’s stop-motion work remains remarkable, full of personality and charm. The 1976 film relies heavily on Rick Baker’s suit, which, while impressive for its time, cannot fully capture the illusion. The animatronic Kong is barely used, likely because it looked less convincing than intended. Jackson’s film benefits from modern technology, with Andy Serkis delivering a motion-capture performance that brings Kong to life in a way previously unimaginable.

king kong robot 

This is pure cinematic sadness.

 

This CGI renders you speechless.

In the end, the 1933 King Kong remains the definitive version, the film that ignited a lifelong love of cinema. The 2005 remake is an ambitious and often brilliant retelling, even if it could have used a firmer editorial hand. The 1976 version, while not without its moments, ultimately falls short, weighed down by questionable decisions and uneven execution. Both the 1933 and 1976 films produced sequels, though neither matched the original, with Son of Kong easily outclassing the misguided King Kong Lives. Until someone finally gives us a proper follow-up worthy of the original, this will have to do.

 

Quick, someone call Linda Hamilton!

Psycho (1960) – Review

Alfred Hitchcock’s Psycho is the film that carved up cinema conventions and left the audience bleeding in the shower. It shocked, scandalized, and changed the way people looked at thrillers, not to mention their bathroom curtains. Over sixty years later, it remains both a masterpiece of suspense and a masterclass in breaking all the rules.

We open in Phoenix, Arizona, where Marion Crane (Janet Leigh), a secretary with a steady job but an unsteady moral compass, decides to fix her love life by stealing $40,000 from her boss. Unfortunately, she’s not exactly slick, she practically waves at a suspicious highway cop, then makes the world’s least subtle car swap in Bakersfield. Determined to reach her boyfriend Sam Loomis (John Gavin) in Fairvale, she instead gets waylaid by a thunderstorm and ends up at the Bates Motel, a roadside joint so empty you can hear the tumbleweeds rolling by. The only thing livelier is Norman Bates (Anthony Perkins), a shy but polite young man who collects taxidermy birds and has… let’s just say, complicated family dynamics.

 

“A boy’s best friend is his mother.”

Dinner with Norman is polite until Marion suggests he institutionalize his mother, which is about as tactful as telling someone their cooking tastes like roadkill. Norman bristles, Marion feels guilty, and she decides to return the money. But Hitchcock, always the prankster, isn’t about to let her off the hook. Cue one of the most famous sequences in film history: Marion’s long, luxurious shower is cut short—literally—by a shadowy figure with a knife. Norman’s horrified reaction afterwards seems genuine as he rushes to mop up the bloody mess, hide Marion’s body and belongings in her car, and roll it all into a swamp like he’s doing spring cleaning.

 

Oh, and the $40,000? Bye-bye.

Enter Marion’s sister, Lila Crane (Vera Miles), who storms into Fairvale demanding answers from Sam. A private detective, Milton Arbogast (Martin Balsam), joins the mix because every missing-person case apparently needs one guy who thinks he’s smarter than everyone else. Arbogast zeroes in on Norman, who’s sweating bullets and stammering so much you wonder if the neon sign outside should read Guilty Motel. But when Arbogast gets too nosy and heads up to the Bates house, he gets treated to a fast trip down the stairs, assisted by gravity and a kitchen knife.

 

The perils of being a private eye in a slasher film.

When Arbogast fails to report back, Sam and Lila start sleuthing. The local sheriff insists Norman’s mother has been dead for a decade, which is not exactly reassuring given all the yelling and window-looming happening up at that creepy house. Refusing to quit, Lila and Sam check into the motel themselves. Sam gets clobbered, Lila sneaks into the Bates home, and in the fruit cellar, she finds Norman’s mother, only she’s been reduced to a mummified skeleton with better hair than half the cast. Norman, now fully dressed as Mom, comes charging in, but Sam tackles him before Lila can join Marion and Arbogast in the “victims of poor travel decisions” club.

 

“What a twist!”

At the police station, a psychiatrist (Simon Oakland) lays it all out like it’s story time: Norman killed his mother and her lover years ago, then resurrected her in his fractured psyche as an alternate personality. Whenever Norman feels attracted to a woman, “Mother” takes over and makes sure nobody has a happy ending. By the time Norman sits in his cell, his own identity is gone—only “Mother” remains, calmly insisting she’s innocent. Meanwhile, Marion’s car and the missing money resurface from the swamp, proving crime doesn’t pay, especially when you check into the wrong motel.

 

Is it wrong to feel a little bad for this poor guy?

Stray Observations:

• Marion starts in angelic white lingerie, but once she pockets the cash, she’s suddenly in black—because even your underwear has to match your moral downfall.
• Norman’s taxidermy hobby is already a red flag. If the guy who runs your motel invites you to dinner and starts talking about his stuffed birds? Get. Back. In. The. Car.
• The iconic shower scene runs just over 3 minutes but contains more than 70 cuts. It’s basically the most violent editing job in history.
• Janet Leigh reportedly avoided showers for the rest of her life—she stuck to baths. Can’t say we blame her.
• Arbogast, a professional detective, calls Lila from a pay phone mid-investigation to announce his next move. Rookie mistake: don’t narrate your plans in a slasher movie.
• Hitchcock deliberately used the crew from Alfred Hitchcock Presents, giving the film a leaner, TV-like look that ended up feeling raw and unsettling.
• Anthony Perkins wasn’t Hitchcock’s first choice—but thank goodness it worked out, because it’s impossible to imagine anyone else as Norman.

 

Sweet, charming and totally unnerving. 

Hitchcock was at the height of his powers in Psycho, gleefully dismantling audience expectations. He shot the film like a low-budget B-movie, but his craft elevated it far above pulp. The cinematography—handled by John L. Russell, one of his TV collaborators—lends an eerie starkness to the film, stripping away glamour for a raw, voyeuristic realism. The shocking murder of Marion Crane at the film’s midpoint was a seismic moment in cinema: killing off a star like Janet Leigh halfway through was practically sacrilege, yet it set the stage for modern horror where no character is truly safe.

 

No one saw this coming back in 1960.

The infamous shower scene isn’t just a murder; it’s film grammar redefined. Over 70 cuts, screaming violins from Bernard Herman, and the cruel genius of suggestion never actually showing the knife penetrate skin, but letting the audience’s imagination do the rest. Hitchcock knew we’d supply the gore ourselves, making us unwilling accomplices. And then, instead of tidily wrapping up Marion’s story, he gleefully tosses her and the $40,000 into a swamp, like the universe saying, “Your little crime spree? “

 

Doesn’t matter. Bigger nightmare ahead.

The twist ending—that Norman’s mother is long dead and that he has “become” her—was just as revolutionary. Today, audiences know it going in, but in 1960, it was a rug-pull on par with finding out Darth Vader was Luke’s dad. It influenced decades of horror, from Halloween to Friday the 13th, embedding the idea of hidden duality, fractured identity, and the monster lurking in the mundane. Hitchcock wasn’t just making a thriller; he was dissecting human psychology with a knife.

 

This film redefined mommy issues.

It should be noted that Hitchcock loathed the infamous psychiatrist scene delivered by Dr. Fred Richman at the end. To him, it was cinematic quicksand; dull, overly talky, and a brutal halt to the movie’s momentum. Critics have since gleefully dubbed it one of his worst scenes ever, and audiences agree it was unnecessary exposition dressed up as psychology. But the studios insisted, worried the big reveal might leave some viewers scratching their heads. So, we got the scene nobody wanted; a talking cure for suspense.

 

My PhD is in exposition.”

The cast sells it with a straight face, which is key to making all this madness work. Janet Leigh gives Marion enough sympathy that we almost root for her crime; Vera Miles brings quiet steel to Lila’s search; Martin Balsam is the detective who should’ve known better; and John Gavin is… well, he’s there. But Anthony Perkins is the whole show. His Norman Bates is jittery, polite, oddly charming, and deeply unsettling. One moment you want to pat him on the shoulder, the next you want to run screaming. He doesn’t play Norman as a monster; he plays him as a fragile boy hiding a monster, and that’s exactly what makes it iconic.

 

Well, he’s also a little pervy. 

In conclusion, Psycho remains a landmark not just in Hitchcock’s career, but in film history. It reinvented the thriller, broke cinematic taboos, and paved the way for modern horror. From Herrmann’s screeching violins to the stark black-and-white cinematography, it’s a movie that still slashes through time as cleanly as Norman’s knife. More than six decades later, it hasn’t lost an ounce of its shock value, though modern audiences might roll their eyes at Marion’s decision to pull over at a motel run by a guy who looks one nervous twitch away from a breakdown. But that’s the power of Hitchcock: he makes you believe every bad decision is the right one, right up until it isn’t.

Saturday, July 11, 2026

Beauty and the Beast (1991) – Review

There’s a special category of movie that makes you feel slightly embarrassed for every other film that tried and failed to be timeless. Disney’s Beauty and the Beast sits there, arms crossed, quietly judging them. It’s polished, heartfelt, and annoyingly close to perfect for something about a guy who gets turned into a very angry shag carpet.

In a faraway land, possibly France, if you ignore the wildly inconsistent accents, a young prince learns the hard way that being a jerk to strangers has consequences. When an old beggar woman offers him an enchanted rose in exchange for shelter, he reacts like someone who’s never been told “no” and gets turned into the Beast (Robby Benson), while his entire staff is transformed into household décor. Now he has to learn to love and be loved before the last petal falls, which feels like a lot of emotional growth for someone who couldn’t even manage basic politeness.

 

Yeah, this could take some work.

Ten years later, we meet Belle (Paige O’Hara), the village’s resident bookworm and walking scandal because she… reads. Her father Maurice (Rex Everhart) is an inventor whose creations mostly scream “fire hazard,” and the town heartthrob Gaston (Richard White) is a human monument to ego. Maurice wanders into the Beast’s castle and gets locked up, because apparently this place runs on a strict “no trespassing, eternal imprisonment” policy. Belle shows up, sees the dungeon situation, and volunteers to take his place, which is either noble or wildly impulsive depending on how you look at it.

 

Winner of Best Daughter of the Year.

Inside the castle, Belle meets the cursed staff: Lumière (Jerry Orbach), Cogsworth (David Ogden Stiers), Mrs. Potts (Angela Lansbury), and Chip (Bradley Pierce), all of whom are one musical number away from aggressively staging an intervention. They push the Beast toward basic human decency, but he mostly responds with yelling. After he scares Belle into the woods, she’s attacked by wolves, and the Beast rescues her, getting injured in the process. This is the film’s way of saying, “Look, he’s not all bad, just… mostly bad with moments of accidental heroism.” From there, they bond, read together, and slowly develop feelings that feel surprisingly earned. It’s nice that they can find a common bond, other than the fact that most people suck.

 

They can start a book club.

Back in the village, Gaston hears Maurice ranting about a monster and immediately decides this is his moment. He teams up with Monsieur D’Arque (Tony Jay), a man whose entire job seems to be locking people away for convenience, and plots to declare Maurice insane unless Belle agrees to marry him. Meanwhile, Belle and the Beast share that iconic ballroom dance, which practically screams, “Oscar voters, are you watching?” When Belle learns Maurice is in trouble, the Beast lets her go, because he’s finally learned the radical concept of caring about someone else.

 

The Beast gets a little emo at this point.

Naturally, Gaston responds to rejection by forming an angry mob. Belle proves the Beast exists via magic mirror, which somehow doesn’t make people less violent. She and Maurice get locked up anyway, because logic has left the building, but Chip saves them using Maurice’s invention, which finally works when the plot demands it. The villagers storm the castle, the enchanted objects fight back like a home décor uprising, and Gaston confronts the Beast. The Beast, now too sad to fight, perks up when Belle returns, spares Gaston, and is immediately rewarded by being stabbed. Gaston then falls to his death because gravity is the only moral authority in this town.

 

Brash, strong and dumb as a box of rocks.

Belle confesses her love just as the last petal falls, reversing the curse in the most dramatically convenient timing imaginable. The Beast turns back into a prince, the staff become human again, and the castle gets a full magical renovation that would bankrupt any real-world contractor. Everyone celebrates with a ball, presumably forgetting that half the village just tried to commit murder five minutes ago, because nothing says closure like a waltz and selective amnesia.

 

Belle wisely keeps quiet about how he looked better as a beast.

Stray Observations:

• The village bookseller has possibly the worst business model in France, generously lending and outright giving away inventory to his one loyal customer like he’s running a charity instead of a shop.
• That torn portrait of the Beast as a human is doing some heavy lifting, because there’s no universe where that’s a ten-year-old boy. Puberty hit early and with a vengeance.
• The villagers pivot from “That old man is clearly unwell” to “Grab the torches, we’re doing a homicide” with the emotional stability of a flipped coin.
• The castle staff decide singing and choreographed dinner service is the best way to solve a centuries-old curse. Not wrong, somehow.
• After an entire musical number dedicated to feeding her, Belle somehow gets sent to bed without actually eating. Five-star entertainment, zero-star meal service.
• Chip is roaming the castle like he’s got diplomatic immunity, while his siblings are locked in a cupboard like they’re grounded indefinitely. Favouritism, but make it porcelain.
• Belle casually walks past an army of enchanted suits of armour during her castle tour, yet when the villagers attack, those guys are nowhere to be found. Took the night off, apparently.

 

Did no one watch Bedknobs and Broomsticks?

It should be noted that Walt Disney himself tried to crack Beauty and the Beast in the 1930s and again in the 1950s, and couldn’t make it work. Which makes sense. The story is basically “Stockholm Syndrome but make it romantic,” and that’s not the easiest sell. Fast forward to the late 80s, The Little Mermaid hits big, and suddenly Disney remembers it can make people feel things again. Enter Richard Purdum, who initially envisioned the film as a straight, non-musical period drama. Try imagining this story without songs. Go ahead. It feels wrong, like a sandwich without bread.

 

“Be our guest.”

Jeffrey Katzenberg apparently had the same reaction and ordered a complete overhaul into a musical. That decision is the difference between “interesting experiment” and “instant classic.” Bringing in Howard Ashman and Alan Menken was the real masterstroke. Ashman’s lyrics are sharp, character-driven, and somehow manage to make exposition fun, while Menken’s compositions carry emotional weight without feeling heavy-handed. “Belle” introduces an entire world in minutes, “Gaston” turns a villain into a punchline and a threat, and “Be Our Guest” is pure spectacle with a Broadway-level sense of showmanship.

 

Then “Beauty and the Beast” itself shows up and quietly wrecks you.

Directors Gary Trousdale and Kirk Wise took what The Little Mermaid started and pushed it further. The animation is richer, more ambitious, and more cinematic. The ballroom sequence alone, with its early use of computer-assisted animation, feels like Disney testing the limits of what it could do and then immediately deciding to exceed them, gliding the camera through space in a way hand-drawn films rarely dared at the time. It’s not just pretty, it’s purposeful. The visuals support the emotional arc instead of distracting from it, enhancing the romance rather than overwhelming it with empty spectacle.

Note: Disney’s Beauty and the Beast became the very first full-length animated feature film in cinema history to be nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture.

There’s also a clear influence from Jean Cocteau’s 1946 La Belle et la Bête, especially in the living objects and the eerie, enchanted atmosphere of the castle. The addition of a swaggering, narcissistic suitor like Gaston echoes Cocteau’s Avenant, but Disney cranks the absurdity up to eleven, turning him into both a legitimate threat and a punchline at the same time. Gaston isn’t just a rival, he’s a walking satire of toxic masculinity before that phrase became a daily headline, embodying entitlement and insecurity in equal measure while somehow still thinking he’s the hero of the story.

 

“And every last inch of me is covered with hair!”

The voice cast deserves its own standing ovation. Paige O’Hara gives Belle warmth and intelligence without turning her into a cliché. Robby Benson brings surprising vulnerability to the Beast, making his transformation feel earned rather than convenient. Angela Lansbury’s Mrs. Potts is basically comfort in audio form, Jerry Orbach’s Lumière is charm personified, and David Ogden Stiers somehow makes a neurotic clock lovable. The fact that Laurence Fishburne, Val Kilmer, and Mandy Patinkin were all considered for the Beast is fascinating, but Benson’s performance hits that perfect balance of menace and heartbreak.

 

This Beast has his own kind of beauty.

Compared to earlier adaptations, which often leaned heavily into the gothic or the moral lesson, this version finds a balance that actually works. It respects the darker elements but wraps them in humour, music, and emotional clarity, making the story accessible without sanding off its edges completely. Audiences didn’t just appreciate that balance; they showed up in droves, turning the film into a box-office powerhouse and proving that Disney’s fairy-tale formula was not only alive but thriving. It’s not the first Beauty and the Beast, but it’s the one everyone remembers, and the one that translated critical acclaim into serious commercial success without breaking a sweat.

 

“The hills are alive with the sound of cash registers ringing.”

In conclusion, Disney’s Beauty and the Beast is what happens when a studio stops second-guessing itself and commits fully to craft, story, and emotion. Between the lush animation, the unforgettable songs by Alan Menken and Howard Ashman, and a voice cast that somehow feels both theatrical and natural, it earns its reputation without breaking a sweat. It’s the kind of film that makes you believe, briefly and against your better judgment, that maybe everything can come together perfectly if the right people are in charge.