When one thinks of stop-motion animation a single name leaps to mind,
and that name would be Ray Harryhausen. From him we saw dinosaurs
rampaging through cities, flying saucers terrorizing the world, and
Sinbad battling numerous mythological beasts, but it was in 1949 with
Mighty Joe Young that it all really started.
With the financial success of the numerous re-issues of the 1933
King Kong
RKO studios decided to return to the big ape well and brought along the
veteran team that made the original classic and it's sequel
Song of Kong; director
Ernest B. Schoedsack, producer
Merian C. Cooper, and screenwriter
Ruth Rose. Joining the gang for his feature film debut was
Ray Harryhausen, and though
Willis O’Brien, the effects wizard behind
King Kong,
is credited as the “Technical Creator” it was Ray Harryhausen, billed
as “First Technician” who did about 90% of the film’s animation. Now
much of the films special effects action sequence were devised by Willis
O’Brien, even some of the film’s story elements, but by today’s
standards that would have made O’Brien the film’s art director or story
editor. The heart and soul of Mister Joseph Young is due to the
brilliant character animation of one Ray Harryhausen.
Ray Harryhausen 1920-2013
The movie opens in Africa where a couple of local natives passing a farm owned by John Young (
Regis Toomey) are stopped by Jill Young (
Lora Lee Michel),
the farmer’s little girl, who desperately wants to buy the baby gorilla
they are carrying. She trades some of her toys and her father’s
flashlight to get the cute little ape who she names Joe. All much to the
chagrin of her father who later has the hard task of explaining to Jill
that she can’t keep Joe because some day he will grow to be a large,
and very dangerous, gorilla. Jill finds the idea of Joe becoming
dangerous to be extremely silly, and she eventually gets her way.
“I promise to feed him, clean up after him, and never let him climb famous landmarks.”
We then jump ahead twelve years and are introduced to
Max O’Hara Productions, a Manhattan agency that puts together theatrical acts and the like. That much of
Might Joe Young’s story is similar to
King Kong should be no surprise to anyone when you consider, as I mentioned above, that the creative team behind this film all worked on
Kong, but the casting of Robert Armstrong as Max O’Hara is close to turning
Mighty Joe Young into a remake. Max O’Hara is a complete carbon copy of Carl Denham from the original
King Kong,
only instead of a film producer he is a theatrical producer, every
other element of his character is identical. The reason for this is that
even though Robert Armstrong’s characters may be called Carl Denham in
one movie and Max O’Hara in the other, but in both cases he is actually
playing the real life film producer Merian C. Cooper. Screenwriter Ruth
Rose based these characters on her boss and friend because he was such a
larger than life character who really deserves a movie of his own as he
was; shot down during the Polish-Soviet War and placed in a Russian POW
camp, which he then escaped by trekking across Siberia on foot, was a
revered bomber pilot in WWII, and later a commander of the "Flying
Tigers.”
“I’m not overacting, if you knew Cooper you’d consider my performance restrained.”
Max O'Hara (
Robert Armstrong)
had come up with the brilliant idea of going to Africa to bring back
live animals to headline his new Hollywood nightclub, with the publicity
bonus of Max sending back action packed tales of his adventures on the
Dark Continent. Along for the ride is Oklahoma cowpoke Gregg (
Ben Johnson)
who convinced O’Hare that cowboys would make for the best animal
wranglers. They do manage to capture a fair amount of lions, but when a
certain gorilla decides to pound on a cage holding one of Max’s lion the
cowboys rush into action, attempting to catch this beast alive under
Max's orders. Crawford (
Denis Green), O’Hare’s local hunting expert, tries to stop them by repeatedly exclaiming, “
Are you crazy, you can’t rope a gorilla!”
He’s got a point, in what universe would roping a giant ape be a good idea?
But before the big bad gorilla can pound O’Hare and his cowboy compatriots into paste a now grown up Jill Young (
Terry Moore)
arrives to call off Joe. Of course the idea of a beautiful girl who can
control a beast like Joe is just catnip to the likes of Max O’Hare, and
with some smooth talking he is able to convince Jill to bring Joe to
America. What is interesting to me is that so far nobody has commented
on Joe’s size, as if a twelve foot tall gorilla is somehow the norm. An
average mountain gorilla stands at about six feet yet Joe Young is
basically the same size as the
Son of Kong.
Did Jill feed him some special diet that accounts for his size?
What
follows is your standard story of small town girl being lured to the
big city, finding out that showbiz isn’t all that it’s cracked up to be,
and her giant ape going on a rampage. Okay, maybe that’s not the
standard story, but if
Showgirls had somehow worked an
ape rampage into it's plot somewhere maybe Elizabeth Berkley would have
had a better career. In this case Jill is unhappy that as successful as
the nightclub act has become Joe himself is not having a grand ole time
as he’s forced to live in a cage in the club's basement.
Jill really should have read that contract a bit closer.
When Jill goes to Max to inform him she and Joe want to go back to Africa Max tells her,
“You can’t. You signed a contract.” Cowboy, and now love interest Gregg, informs O’Hare, “
You know that contract’s no good. She’s underage.”
Which is a great salient point, and one that Max can’t refute, but it’s
also kind of icky when you consider the that later Jill and the much
older Gregg hook-up and move back to Africa together. Shows how society
has changed over the years when back in 1949 a person not old enough to
sign a business contract could still sign a marriage one. Legalities
aside Max is able to convince Jill to stay on until he is able to find a
replacement act, but after seven weeks one begins to wonder if he’s
even looking.
How many other acts can pick up a piano?
Or win a tug of war with the 10 strongest men in the world?
It
all comes to a head when after one of the acts, Jill playing an organ
grinder while the audience pelts Joe with large coins, a group of drunks
make it down to where Joe is caged (great security there, Max), who
then proceed to get Joe drunk and then torture him. Joe takes this abuse
about as well one could expect from a twelve foot tall inebriated ape.
He literally brings the house down.
After
wrecking the nightclub, which included beating the crap out of a bunch
of the lions O’Hare brought back from Africa, Joe is helped back into
his cage by Jill and Gregg before the police can arrive and shoot him.
Unfortunately due to the injuries and damage caused by Joe the courts
order that Joe must be destroyed. This is proof that Max must have the
most incompetent lawyers on retainer, because the fact that no one was
killed and all the damages were to Max’s own club, the most that should
have happened would have been Jill and Joe being deported. With Joe’s
execution in the wings Max formulates a plan to sneak Jill, Gregg and
Joe out of the country which leads to a countywide chase that ends when
our group of heroes stop running when the encounter a burning orphanage.
There probably wasn’t an actually law stating that if a giant ape
rescues a baby from a fiery orphanage he gets a stay of execution, but
I’m sure there is now.
The Joseph Young/Fiery Orphanage Exemplary Act.
The
scene of Joe climbing the burning tree, as the orphanage collapses in a
fiery conflagration around him, is pure poetry in action. You may have
pitied poor Kong as he swatted at the biplanes from atop the Empire
State Building, but you will be at the edge of your seat, heart in your
mouth, as Joe struggles to save this little girl as the world around him
bursts into flames. This is what made Ray Harryhausen the unadulterated
master of the art of stop-motion animation, because he brought such a
depth of character to what in reality was just a table top clay model.
This is one of my favorite movies of the genre, and is only nudged down
from Kong for its unfortunate lack of dinosaur fights.
But it does have a happier ending than King Kong.
Unfortunately the story of a benevolent ape and his best gal pal didn’t catch fire the same way that
Kong
did with audiences back in the thirties, though it was honored with an
Academy Award for Special Effects, but critical acclaim aside the poor
box office take nixed any plans for a sequel. Which is a crying shame as
the sequel they had planned was tentatively titled
"Joe Meets Tarzan" and would have starred Lex Barker who had just appeared in
Tarzan and the Slave Girl. I’d like to believe that in some alternate universe that film was made and was a
huge success.
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