New ‘Kong: Skull Island’ Photo Provides Our First Good Look At The King Of Apes
Ever since the first teaser trailer forKong: Skull Islanddebuted at San Diego Comic-Conthis past summer, the buzz about the action adventure reboot of the classic 1933 movie monster has been fairly non-existent. There was a little peak of excitement when aposter popped up at New York Comic-Conwith some ties to the 2014 reboot ofGodzilla, but then things quieted down again. However, we’re going to hear Kong roar again soon enough.
A new trailer forKong: Skull Islandwas recently classified, and it should be arriving next week with the release ofFantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them(both are Warner Bros. movies). But in the meantime, a new photo from the movie finally gives us our first good look at the new King Kong.

Check out the new Kong Skull Island photo after the jump.
Entertainment Weeklydebuted the new photo, and they also sat down for a chat with directorJordan Vogt-Robertsabout his first foray into blockbuster filmmaking after breaking through in the indie world withThe Kings of Summer, and presumably following sometime soon withThe King Kongs of Summer.
The magazine asked just what we’re looking at in this photo, besides the ape himself, and the director explained:
“That sequence comes from a point in the movie where you’re not quite sure who Kong is, what his purpose is, how people should be perceiving him. Through the folly of man, where our initial instinct is to attack anything that is not a known quantity, both sides jump the gun, Kong and the humans, and it kicks off a relatively messy engagement. At first, of course you’re going to perceive something like that as a terrible threat and monster — the physicality of him alone.”
Sounds like exactly what you’d expect from a King Kong movie, and it’s a story that was explored rather effectively with Peter Jackson’s remake of the classic back in 2005. The question is what makes this story different from all the King Kong stories that came before it. Having the movie set in the 1970s certainly changes things up a bit, but there’s gotta be something more to it than that right?
As of now, we don’t even really know who is behind the performance of King Kong in the movie.Dawn of the Planet of the ApesstarToby Kebbell(who has a human role in Kong: Skull Island) said that he helpedTerry Notarywith the performance, but morerecently he was a bit crypticwith who would really be named responsible for bringing the ape to life.
As for the human cast, it’s quite an impressive assembly of talent that includesTom Hiddleston,Brie Larson,Corey Hawkins, andJason MitchellwithSamuel L. Jackson,John Goodman,Thomas Mann,Shea Whigham,Eugene CorderoandTian Jing. Will that be enough to get audiences interested in yet another take on King Kong? We certainly hope so.