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Congo is a 1995 American - based on the 1980 novel by . It was directed by Frank Marshall and stars , , , , Joe Don Baker and . Released on June 9, 1995 by Paramount Pictures, the film tells the story of an expedition team and a owned by one of its members who go to the Congo jungles to find a missing expedition and the ruins of an ancient civilization where diamonds might be located while encountering the undiscovered and violent gorilla species that lurks near there. It received negative reviews, but performed better than expected at the box office.


Plot
Searching for rare blue diamonds that could enable a revolutionary communications laser, TraviCom employees Charles Travis and Jeffrey Weems discover the ruins of a lost city near a remote in the Congo jungle. Karen Ross, Charles's ex-fiancée and a former CIA operative, and R.B. Travis, Charles's father and the CEO of TraviCom, lose contact with the team while tracking their progress at the company headquarters. A remote camera shows the camp destroyed and strewn with corpses, before a monstrous destroys the camera. Travis asks Karen to lead another expedition to the site.

Peter Elliott and his assistant Richard teach human communication to a named Amy, whose is translated into a digitized voice. Peter is concerned by Amy's drawings of jungles and the Eye of Providence, and wants to return her to Africa. Karen and Romanian philanthropist Herkermer Homolka join the expedition.

The group flies to and meets wilderness guide Monroe Kelly. Captain Wanta warns them not to trust Homolka and lets them proceed only upon receipt of a large bribe. On their journey via and then , Monroe reveals that Homolka has led previous, disastrous in search of the "Lost City of Zinj". Their plane is shot down as they parachute into the jungle.

A native tribe leads them to Bob Driscoll, a wounded member of Charles's expedition who dies screaming upon sight of Amy. The group continues by boat and they learn that Homolka believes Amy can lead them to the mine. They find the ruined camp near the City of Zinj. Richard and some porters are killed by a gray gorilla. The group keeps the gray gorillas at bay with automated sentry guns.

At daybreak, they explore the city and surmise from hieroglyphs that the inhabitants bred the gray gorillas to guard the mine, but were overthrown by them. At the mine, Homolka begins collecting diamonds, only to be killed by the gray gorillas. Monroe, Karen, and Peter flee deeper into the mine, where they discover Jeffrey and Charles's bodies, with the latter still holding a giant blue diamond. Karen fits the diamond into a portable laser and uses it to kill several gray gorillas. The volcano erupts, and the four escape as lava floods the city killing the gray gorillas.

Karen reports to Travis, but when she learns that Travis was only interested in the diamond, she destroys the TraviCom satellite. They find a in one of Travis's wrecked cargo planes. Seeing Amy with fellow mountain gorillas, Peter bids her goodbye. The three take off in the balloon, and Karen has Peter throw the diamond into the jungle below.

Amy watches the departing balloon, then joins the other mountain gorillas.


Cast
  • as Karen Ross, an electronics expert and former CIA operative
  • as Peter Elliott, a
  • as Captain Monroe Kelly, a mercenary guide
  • as Herkermer Homolka, a
  • as Richard, Peter's research assistant.
  • Joe Don Baker as R.B. Travis, the CEO TraviCom
  • John Hawkes as Bob Driscoll
  • Mary Ellen Trainor as Moira
  • as Boyd
  • as Eleanor Romy
  • as Assistant
  • as College President
  • as 727 Pilot
  • as Samahani, a truck driver
  • Michael Chinyamurindi as Claude, a porter from Mombasa
  • Fidel Bateke as Mizumu
  • as Roadblock Officer
  • Darnell Suttles as Hospital Interrogator
  • Robert Almodovar as Rudy, TraviCom head of security
  • as Mr. Janus
  • Kathleen Connors as Sally
  • Lola Noh & Misty Rosas as the in-suit performers of Amy, a mountain gorilla owned by Peter who wears a special backpack and high-tech glove that translates her sign language.
  • as Captain Wanta (uncredited), a Ugandan military officer
  • as Eddie Ventro (uncredited), a tour guide

The mountain gorillas and gray gorillas are in-suit performed by Christopher Antonucci, David Anthony, John Munro Cameron, Jay Caputo, Nicholas Kadi, John Alexander Lowe, Garon Michael, Peter Elliott, Brian La Rosa, David St. Pierre, and Philip Tan.


Featuring
The following were listed under this section in the credits:

  • as Charlie Travis, a TraviCom employee, Karen's ex-fiancé, and R.B.'s son.
  • as Jeffrey Weems, a TraviCom employee who accompanied Charlie to Congo
  • Adewale Akinnuoye-Agbaje as Kahega, Monroe's deputy


Voices
  • as the voice of Amy
  • as the gorilla vocal effects
  • Gary A. Hecker & Peter Elliott provide the gorilla vocalization


Production

Development and writing
After the success of The First Great Train Robbery, Crichton decided to write a screenplay specifically for as the character Charles Munro, an archetypal "great white hunter" akin to H. Rider Haggard's hero . The film was envisioned as an homage to classic pulp adventure tales, and Crichton successfully pitched the movie to 20th Century Fox in 1979 without a fleshed out story. Crichton left the project when he learned that he could not use a real gorilla to portray the character of Amy. It was offered to several directors including and . A brief attempt was made to revive the project in the late 1980s. Eventually, Frank Marshall directed the film with little, if any, involvement from Crichton. The film's credits John Patrick Shanley and Crichton as co-screenwriters, but the trailer and the film itself credit Shanley alone.

Originally, was set to shoot his scene in the Dominican Republic, but ended up shooting it in Pasadena, California.

The gorilla suits for Amy the mountain gorilla and the gray gorillas as well as the hippopotamus puppet were created by 's company Stan Winston Studio.


Release

Marketing
A teaser trailer for Congo debuted in theaters on November 18, 1994, with the release of Star Trek Generations. It was also attached to the release of . Promotional partners included , , and .


Home media
Congo was released on and on November 21, 1995. The LaserDisc release is certified and consists of widescreen and pan and scan fullscreen versions, while also featuring a AC-3 track. A widescreen VHS release debuted a year later on September 10, 1996. The was released on July 27, 1999.

In 2024, ahead of the film's 30th anniversary, announced a 4K Blu-ray release of the film as part of their "Ultra" sub-label, under license from Paramount and newly remastered from the original film elements.


Reception

Box office
Congo was estimated to gross $13–$15 million in its opening weekend, but surprised the industry when it grossed $24.6 million for the weekend, placing number one at the US box office ahead of Casper. It was overtaken by during its second weekend. In the United States and Canada, the film grossed $81,022,101. The final worldwide gross was $152,022,101 versus a $50,000,000 budget.


Critical response
collected 52 reviews to give the film an approval rating of 23% with a rating average of 4.1/10. The site's consensus states: "Mired in campy visual effects and charmless characters, Congo is a suspenseless adventure that betrays little curiosity about the scientific concepts it purports to care about." rated it 22/100 based on 19 reviews, meaning "generally unfavorable" reviews. of Chicago Sun-Times rated it 3 out of 4 stars. He called the film a splendid example of a genre no longer much in fashion, the jungle adventure story. It was nominated for seven Golden Raspberry Awards. of The Washington Post called the film a " knockoff...shamelessly lifting themes and ideas from a handful of Steven's greatest hits." He criticized Amy the gorilla as "the most disappointing 'performance' of all" and opined that the supporting actors, Tim Curry and Ernie Hudson, stood out more than the lead actors.

The A.V. Clubs Ignatiy Vishnevetsky said Congo was full of "goofy pleasures" like "delectably goofy" lasers and "mutant killer apes", calling it one of the most enjoyable films that came out of the post– Jurassic Park period. He said he enjoyed the film more as a campy comedy than as the thriller the trailers made it out to be, and concluded with "Is Congo a good film? It's certainly a good time."


Accolades
Golden Raspberry AwardWorst New StarAmy the Talking Gorilla
Worst Supporting Actress
Worst Supporting Actor
Worst Original Song "(Feel) the Spirit of Africa"
Worst ScreenplayJohn Patrick Shanley
Worst PictureKathleen Kennedy
Worst DirectorFrank Marshall
Best Science Fiction FilmKathleen Kennedy
Sam Mercer
Best DirectorFrank Marshall


Other media

Video game
A based on the film, , was released for in 1996. A different game for the Super Nintendo Entertainment System and was in development, but was cancelled. Another adventure game was released for PC and Macintosh called .


Pinball
A Williams machine named Congo was produced in 1995 that was based on the film.


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