Le jeune Bobby manquait de se faire manger par un tyrannosaure, mais était sauvé par King Kong, qui habitait l'île. A bald, big-brained and bespectacled mad scientist who wants to capture Kong for his own evil schemes. King Kong (1933) The Son of Kong (1933) King Kong vs. Godzilla (1962) King Kong Escapes (1967) It is the first anime series produced in Japan for an American company (not counting Rankin/Bass' previous Animagic stop motion productions, also animated in Japan). It may be a little out there for purists, but if you’ve got a monkey on your back for all things Kong, it’s absolutely essential. The best analysis I’ve ever read of him was from Maserpatrol, where they called him, “an enthusiastic go-getter with a can-do attitude and a real passion for customer service”. Dr. Who (ドクター・フー, Dokutā Fū) is a recurring villain in The King Kong Show, as well as the human antagonist in the 1967 Toho and Rankin/Bass film, King Kong Escapes. He is the basis for Hideyo Amamoto's character Dr. Who in King Kong Dr. Who : This could be our last chance to get Kong. The film is a loose adaptation of the Rankin/Bass Productions Saturday morning cartoon series The King Kong Show and was the second and final Toho-produced film featuring King Kong. King Kong Escapes was released in Japan on July 22, 1967 and released in the United States on June 19, 1968. The King Kong Show (Japanese: キングコング・001/7親指トム) is an American/Japanese anime-influenced series produced by Videocraft International and Toei Animation. He is captured and brought to Japan, where he escapes from captivity and battles Godzilla. Yet as gloriously mad as it is, “King Kong Escapes” is a thoroughbred descendant of the “King Kong” movie legacy with all the proper provenance. King Kong Escapes (released in Japan as Counterattack of King Kong (キングコングの逆襲 Kingu Kongu no Gyakushū), is a 1967 Japanese-American science-fiction kaiju film featuring King Kong, co-produced by Toho and Rankin/Bass. Dans ces dessins animés, un savant, le docteur Bond, et ses deux enfants, Bobby et Susan, arrivaient sur une île tropicale. HEADCANON: The "Dr. Who" seen in King Kong Escapes is actually the master in his 11th regeneration Well he DOES resemble an Asian William Hartnell. The popular recurring villain. A mad scientific genius and international criminal, Dr. On ground, the machine will take the real Kong without any doubt. At sea, our robot Kong cannot get him. A newspaper and television station funded by a pharmaceutical company want a sensation, which happens to be the discovery of King Kong on an island. Dr. Who was a favorite villain from my childhood, too. He has no relation to the British sci-fi series. He does, doesn't he?