CAST:
Michael Gough (Dr Charles Decker), Margo
Johns (Margaret), Claire Gordon (Sandra Banks), Jess Conrad (Bob
Kenton), Austin Trevor (Dean Foster), Jack Watson (Superintendent
Brown), George Pastell (Professor Tagor)
PRODUCTION:
Director – John Lemont, Screenplay – Herman
Cohen & Aben Kandel, Producers – Nathan Cohen & Stuart Levy,
Photography – Desmond Dickinson, Music – Gerard Schurman, Makeup – Jack
Craig, Art Direction – Wilfred Arnold. Production Company – Merton Park
Studios.
SYNOPSIS:
Dr Charles Decker returns after having
been missing for a year following a plane crash in Uganda. He has
discovered a serum among the natives. Using Konga, a chimpanzee he has
brought back with him, he determines to perfect his theories regarding
the links between plant life and human tissue and the belief that plants
can be commanded by human will. He injects Konga with the serum, which
causes it to increase to the size of gorilla. He then uses Konga to go
out and kill rivals and those who impede his research.
The lynchpin of Herman Cohen’s English
films was Michael Gough. Michael Gough had great success, delivering a
wonderfully cruel and demented performance as the killer crime writer in
Black Museum. Cohen again casts Michael Gough here and also would in The Black Zoo (1963) and Berserk (1967), all of which headlined Gough as a demented killer.
Konga
is a thoroughly schlocky film. There is some wonderfully overwrought
nonsense about witch doctors making plants subservient to their wills
and scenes of Michael Gough walking through the conservatory throwing
meat to his carnivorous plants. Gough fires the film up with a
wonderfully arrogant performance. However, the rest of Konga
is routine hackwork and it is only Michael Gough’s presence that
enlivens it in any way. The ape suit is incredibly shabby – somehow in
being enlarged from normal to human-size the ape manages to go from
being a chimp into a gorilla. The terrible optically enlarged scenes
with the chimpanzee rampaging have justly accorded Konga a Golden Turkey status.
Herman Cohen’s other genre films include:- Bela Lugosi Meets a Brooklyn Gorilla (1952), Target Earth (1954), I Was a Teenage Werewolf (1957), I Was a Teenage Frankenstein (1957), Blood of Dracula (1957), How to Make a Monster (1958), The Headless Ghost (1959), Horrors of the Black Museum (1959), The Black Zoo (1963), A Study in Terror (1965), Berserk (1967), Trog (1970) and Craze (1973).
Artwork: Jamie Somerville