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"Quite frankly, the twentieth century sucks. Maybe the twenty-first will be better."

1995 PG-13 / Scifi Adventure

Directed by:
Frank Marshall

Starring:
Laura Linney, Ernie Hudson, Tim Curry

Tagline

    Where you are the endangered species

Summary Capsule

    A quest for some blue diamonds in Africa leads to... KILLER MONKEYS!

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Justin's Rating: What people will do for a monkey. So sad.
Justin's Review: Michael Crichton is a freak. Here's a guy who takes gobs of pseudo-science and hacks them out into easy-to-read novels, fully expecting them to be made into feature films. And we do! No questions asked!

"The entire plot of Congo might well have come from a writing project in a 4th grade class."
Jurassic Park gave filmmakers a much-needed excuse to have dinos running rampant, and after that success, Hollywood became M.C.'s little sweet playthang. I'll admit, while flawed with logic problems out of the wazoo, Jurassic Park was a pretty entertaining book and film. But after you have the Dinos In The Park story done cinematically, what was there left of his? A bubble on the ocean floor with a loopy alien (Sphere). A GUY filing a sexual harassment suit on a GIRL (Disclosure). Vikings fighting cannibals (The 13th Warrior). And a little diddy involving Killer Apes Protecting Their Diamonds (Congo). I swear, none of his books make a bit of sense, but at least the effort for filmmakers to produce reasonable movies from them keeps me laughing.

The entire plot of Congo might well have come from a writing project in a 4th grade class. "Once upon a time, there was a man who loved a monkey so much, he taught it to talk. And once it could talk, the monkey kept whining about how it wanted to go back to the jungle. So the man in the yellow hat and his monkey teamed up with a bunch of other weird people and went to Africa. One of the weird people was a crazy lady who is trying to find diamonds for her Super-Laser. On their way, some Killer Hippos attack. Then they find a lost city of diamonds, but it is protected by Killer Apes. Most of them die. Some don't. And then there's a volcano explosion. The End."

It's hard to relay the hackneyed plot of Congo with a straight face. But fortunately, the sheer mad, mad, mad, madness of it all means more fun for the rest of us. Congo isn't anywhere near honest science fiction, but it happily falls right into the spirit of a campy Indiana Jones romp. Most of it has to do with the diverse cast, and how much they're all wacked.

The main guy is a naive little waif channeling the spirit of Steve Guttenberg, and he's got a serious crush on his monkey. I have seen movies, like Project X, where I as a viewer needed to accept that some people really, really like their monkeys. But this guy is so head over heels for his fellow primate that he fails to notice that Amy the gorilla is COMPLETELY FAKE. I mean, no wonder Amy can talk — she's just a gorilla suit with some scientist prankster hiding inside! You truly won't be astonished with what Amy does during this film. Amy smokes a cigar. Amy drinks a martini (Amy is not a very good role model for the kiddos). Amy paints. Amy looks sad at man's folly. Amy parachutes out of an airplane (seriously). Steve Guttenberg-Man is oblivious to the gorilla suit zippers, and he feels all sad and weepy and has to take Amy to Africa to put her back in the jungle. Now here's what I don't get: there comes a point where you can take a joke too far. Just because the guy is gullible is no reason to make him get all those Malaria shots, go through a war-torn area, and risk the horrors of Tim Curry's overacting. Just pull off the head and say, "April Fools!" already.

Joining the monkey crew is Tim Curry is a Russian philanthropist-slash-shifty guy in search for his shiny rocks. Plus, he's got a nutty accent! Ernie Hudson (Winston from Ghostbusters) is their jungle-savvy guide, with just the right pinache to make watching him fun. There's also this girl who may or may not be Meryl Streep (or possibly that girl from Jurassic Park), who is searching for her fiancé and has all the cool gadgets. At one point, she sets up a campsite guarded with (remember, this is the inner congo, where they had to lug this stuff countless miles) laser fencing and automated sentry machine guns. I kid you not. Oh, and did I mention that her fiancé happens to be... BRUCE CAMPBELL? The Human Chin is only in this film for the first five minutes or so, but hey, those are the best five minutes of motion picture history.

If Congo has a serious point to make, it's lost on me. There was discussion early on in the film about how apes can be taught to talk by other apes, and how "killer apes" are a total myth. That's all well and good until we get to the end of the film, where they prove that most monkeys are anti-human to the murderous extreme, and even ape-lovin' guy shoots them without flinching. If monkey deaths make you happy, then this is really the film for you. They get shot, lasered, blown up, and even melted by liquid hot magma. A lot of the action scenes are done in that blurry kind of slow motion that annoyed me as well in Battlefield Earth.

All of the animals are pretty darn fake, including the Killer Hippos (ya thought I was making that up, didn't you?). I know hippos are hostile and all, but when they attack on the river it so reminded me of that Jungle Ride at Disney World, where the guide has to shoot the hippo every one of the five million times it lunges out of the water at the boat. That scene is kind of indicative to the entire film. You either think it's pretty cheesy and have to wash your hands of the whole thing, or you think it's pretty cheesy and you watch on because you feel moral superiority to the film industry in general. I laughed, but then, I generally do at the scenes of senseless accidents.


Kyle's Rating: I can’t remember the book, and you won’t remember the movie!
Kyle's Review: It seems like not that long ago that Michael Crichton appeared to be the king of pop culture. There were those Jurassic Park books (one was cool, the second one was wacky), some other stuff, and some other stuff that validates my statement. Trust me on this one. Anyway, he had a bunch of cool books out there and it seemed like anything developed out of his writing was golden! We cried: Crichton for president! Let’s hook his mind up to some sort of machine that sucks out his ideas and turns them into something that benefits all of mankind and gets us all the hot fudge we want. Whoa, they made a movie version of Congo! The reason we were born is finally here! Yeah!

"Let’s hook his mind up to some sort of machine that sucks out his ideas and turns them into something that benefits all of mankind and gets us all the hot fudge we want."
Sadly, upon viewing, Congo was revealed as something that sucked something out of its audience: a little chunk of our souls and innocence. It wasn’t that it was dull or anything, it just took that great book it was based on and made up realize how paint-by-the-numbers the movie and book really were. With a premise of killer apes in the Congo and loads of money and satellites and big blue diamonds, you wouldn’t think anything could go wrong. But it did!

Congo is harmless fun, I suppose (my friend Steve was entranced by it and collected all the toys made; I only bought the Amy and killer apes figures), but it’s so cotton candy fluffy that I can’t in good conscience suggest you watch this. It’s not bad, it’s not good, just please play outside or something instead. Save a tree! You’ll be better off! And don’t go into the Congo! I’m not sure where it is, but there are volcanoes there! Run!


A man and his monkey. Suit.


"I *am* spouting very believable sciency stuff and you should swallow it without question!"


This picture speaks for itself, sadly.

Didja Notice? [some sources: IMDb]

  • Shoot down missiles with flare guns!
  • We are so dumb, compared to monkeys
  • Communications companies have a hard time keeping in touch
  • Satellites are easy to down
  • Diamonds are just for throwing away
  • Delroy Lindo and Joe Pantoliano in uncredited cameos
  • Apes can cause heart attacks
  • Air conditioning in the jungle - how cool is that?
  • Why didn't they check the second plane for additional communications supplies?
  • Doom, the videogame

Is It Worth Staying Through End Credits?

    No more monkeys!

Intermission! [some sources: IMDb]

    Director Frank Marshall originally intended to use the computer work pioneered on Jurassic Park for the gorillas, but opted for models as the computers weren't capable of reproducing hair in 1995.

    This film is riddled with inaccuracies with respect to lasers. A diamond is a pure carbon crystal, with little impurities. The gems (such as manufactured rubies) used as mediums in lasers work because of the impurities in them. Not to mention the medium of a laser couldn't be inserted into a laser as shown. Also, there is no way that kind of output could've been achieved using only a backpack-sized power supply.

Groovy Quotes

    Monroe: Quite frankly, the twentieth century sucks. Maybe the twenty-first will be better.

    Monroe Kelly: I'm your great white hunter, but I happen to be black.

    Richard: So, what was your name again?
    Claude: Claude.
    Richard: Oh. Well, that's a very odd name for someone from... uh... where are you from again?
    Claude: Umbasa.
    Richard: Yeah, that's a very odd name for someone from Umbasa.
    Claude: Have you ever been to Umbasa?
    Richard: Um, no.
    Claude: Then what do you know about it?

    [Did this make anyone else think of Princess Bride... "He's only partly dead..."?]
    Monroe: The ghost tribe has several levels of "dead." Someone's not dead until they're completely "dead."

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End Credits

This review page was last updated on 10.2.06

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