Gorillas in popular culture explained
Representations of gorillas are common in popular culture in the Western world[1] with the full range of electronic media having gorillas as mascots, gorillas behaving like humans, and humans behaving like gorillas.
Art
- The French sculptor Emmanuel Frémiet won a medal of honour at the Salon of 1887 for his masterly Gorilla Carrying off a Woman ("Gorille enlevant une Femme"). The sculpture depicts a gorilla abducting a woman, something totally alien to actual gorilla behaviour.[2] The Frémiet sculpture had somehow caught the public's imagination, as witnessed by the repeated popularity of the King Kong theme.
Animation
- The 1942 Superman cartoon Terror on the Midway featured the Man of Steel fighting a gorilla that has escaped during a circus fire.
- In the 1944 Donald Duck cartoon Donald Duck and the Gorilla, a gorilla named Ajax escapes from the city zoo and terrorizes Donald Duck.
- Magilla Gorilla is a well-known Hanna-Barbera cartoon from the 1960s.
- In the Dragon Ball franchise, the protagonist Goku and several other characters belong to an extraterrestrial species known as Saiyans that can transform into gigantic gorilla-like beings called Great Apes.
- In the animated 1999 Disney version of Tarzan, the hero's adopted family are gorillas (unlike the "Great Apes" of the original book), including Kala (voiced by Glenn Close), Kerchak (voiced by Lance Henriksen) and Terk (voiced by Rosie O'Donnell).
- In 2005 animated prequel film Tarzan II, several additional characters are introduced: Uto (voiced by Brad Garrett), Kago (voiced by Ron Perlman), Mama Gunda (voiced by Estelle Harris), and Zugo (voiced by George Carlin).
- In the Tarzan-parody animated TV series George of the Jungle, George's best friend is an erudite talking gorilla named Ape. In the Disney 1997 film adaptation, Ape is voiced by John Cleese.
- Windsor, a supporting character in the animated Cartoon Network series, My Gym Partner's a Monkey, is a gorilla.
- In the anime series Cromartie High School, a gorilla is one of the more powerful delinquents at Cromartie High. He (she?) also plays backup guitar for "Freddie", a fellow student who may or may not be Freddie Mercury.
- The Iron Kong in the Zoids universe is a mecha shaped like a gorilla.
- In the Beast Wars and Beast Machines TV series, the leader of the Maximals, Optimus Primal, adopted an organic-skinned "beast mode" of a gorilla; and later in the series a TransMetal gorilla, and then (Beast Machines) he became a techno-organic gorilla.
- In the animated television series Ben 10, the future version of Dr. Animo has a detachable human head and the body of a gorilla as seen in the episode "Ben 10,000".
- Ultimate Spidermonkey from is based on a gorilla mixed with a spider.
- Gor-illa/Gor is a gorilla made sentient by an alien race in the science fiction cartoon Captain Simian & the Space Monkeys.
- Several gorilla characters appear in the Disney Junior series The Lion Guard, including Majinuni (voiced by Daniel Howell), Hafifu (voiced by Phil Lester), King Sokwe (voiced by John Rhys-Davies), and Shujaa (voiced by Christopher Jackson).
- A western lowland gorilla named Momo appears in the Class of 3000 episode "Funky Monkey". He lives in the Zoo Atlanta and wants to be a drummer like Lil D.
- In the manga One-Punch Man, there is a character named "Armored Gorilla".
Comics
- In The Adventures of Tintin comic The Black Island, a gorilla called Ranko was featured, who people thought was a monster.
- Gorillas were frequently used as a gimmick to sell comics during the Silver Age of Comic Books: see Gorillas in comics.
- Several intelligent gorilla characters appear in DC Comics media: the heroes Congorilla and Solovar, and the villains Gorilla Grodd and Monsieur Mallah.
- Marvel Apes, a Marvel Comics mini-series in which The Gibbon is transported into an alternate earth where all the Superheroes have simian counterparts (Captain Apemerica).
- In the Planet of the Apes comic books, normal-sized gorillas fill security/military roles.
- Grease Monkey is a science fiction series centered around intelligent gorillas.
- In the space opera webcomic Schlock Mercenary, one of the recurring characters is an uplifted gorilla (i.e. a gorilla that has genetically enhanced, human-level sentience). This gorilla also bears the name Kerchak.
Film
- The giant gorilla is a recurring theme in film, especially in the various incarnations of King Kong and Mighty Joe Young.
- Ingagi (1930), lost Pre-Code hoax documentary (now regarded as an exploitation film) about apes kidnapping native women.
- Tarzan the Ape Man (1932), first sound-era Tarzan film starring Johnny Weissmuller.
- Murders in the Rue Morgue (1932), Universal Pictures horror tale based on the 1841 Edgar Allan Poe story.
- The Gorilla (1939), horror comedy film starring the Ritz Brothers, Anita Louise, Lionel Atwill, and Bela Lugosi.
- Perils of Nyoka (1942), Republic Pictures movie serial with Kay Aldridge as Nyoka the Jungle Girl.
- The Ape Man (1943), horror-science fiction story starring Bela Lugosi.
- Nabonga (1944), a PRC jungle girl film starring Buster Crabbe and Julie London.
- White Pongo (1945), safari adventure yarn about fictional white ape.
- Mark of the Gorilla (1950), Jungle Jim tale of Nazis impersonating great apes.
- Bride of the Gorilla (1951), starring Raymond Burr who changes into a gorilla and torments his wife.
- Bela Lugosi Meets a Brooklyn Gorilla (1952), comedy featuring Duke Mitchell and Sammy Petrillo, as Dean Martin and Jerry Lewis clones, meet Béla Lugosi on a remote island who can turn people into gorillas.
- Robot Monster (1953), campy, low-budget science fiction yarn with alien ape creatures.
- Spooks! (1953), in this comedy short, The Three Stooges encounter mad scientist bent on transplanting human brains into apes.
- Gorilla at Large (1954), horror mystery B-movie set in a carnival.
- The Bride and the Beast (1958), horror film directed by Adrian Weiss and co-written by Edward D. Wood Jr. Kong Island, aka King of Kong Island (1968), Italian jungle adventure saga with a science fiction element (i.e., apes controlled by mad scientist).
- Gorillas in the Mist: The Story of Dian Fossey (1988), drama documenting a scientist in East Africa's Rwanda crusading for the rights of endangered mountain gorillas.
- Baby's Day Out (1994), American comedy film shows a segment of a gorilla protecting the protagonist from the kidnappers.
- Congo (1995), African action adventure film loosely based on Michael Crichton's novel of the same name.
- Tarzeena, Queen of Kong Island (2008), exploitation film directed by Fred Olen Ray.
- (2017), retelling of King Kong.
- Various non-human apes dominate the world in the Planet of the Apes novel and film series, among them gorillas, who act as the soldiers and laborers in ape society. Notable characters include General Ursus and Aldo.
- George the white gorilla from Rampage (2018), film directed by Brad Peyton.
- Gus Gorilla is a murderous animatronic from Willy's Wonderland.
Magazines and literature
- Fester Bestertester, the protagonist of Don Martin's Mad strip National Gorilla-Suit Day is beset by gorillas (or persons dressed as gorillas). "National Gorilla-Suit Day" is celebrated every year on January 31.
- In the award-winning novel Ishmael, written by Daniel Quinn, a gorilla teaches the protagonist about the history of humanity and the effect "civilized" culture has had on other species.
- The novel Congo features "killer" gorillas
- In The Uplift War, a science-fiction novel by David Brin, gorillas transported to the planet Garth for experiments in uplift play a significant role in the plot.
- In the North American Confederacy alternate history series by L. Neil Smith, gorillas (along with other greater primates) are recognized as sentient beings and are granted full citizenship in the eponymous political entity. In the first novel in the series, The Probability Broach, a gorilla, Olongo Featherstone-Haugh (pronounced "Fanshaw"), is mentioned as having served as the largely ceremonial Vice-President of the NAC. The second novel, The Venus Belt, states that he was then elected as the equally ceremonial President of the NAC from 1996 to 2000, retiring after one term.
- In the Animorphs book series, one of the main characters, Marco, shapeshifts into the form of a gorilla as his main 'battle morph'.
Music
Online games
- Gorillas are also Beasts in the popular fantasy MMO World of Warcraft some can be tamed and used by the Hunter Class in the game though they are not nearly as commonly used as other potential pets.
- In the popular superhero-themed MMO Champions Online, Dr. Silverback is one of the most important heroes of the setting and a contact for the players.
- The team-based multiplayer shooter Overwatch features a hero named Winston, a gorilla who was born and raised on a futuristic lunar colony and received an education in science, enabling him to become an advanced engineer and scientist himself.
Schools
Sports
Television
- The gorilla suit is an eternally popular gag costume on television series.
- Among the earliest examples is the gorilla-suited Nairobi Trio, a recurring-gag element of the 1950s TV comedy series, The Ernie Kovacs Show
- The Electric Company featured a gorilla character named "Paul", friend to Jennifer of the Jungle.
- On the Canadian children's cable network YTV, a recurring character on the series The Zone is Gorilla Stan, a person wearing a cheap Halloween costume.
- Multiple episodes of SpongeBob SquarePants contain Gorillas as characters. In the episode "I Had an Accident", Patrick dresses up as a Gorilla while pretending to attack Sandy to lure SpongeBob back outside. Another starfish that looks like him comes up, turning out to be a real Gorilla, who attacks Patrick and Sandy by throwing them into a bag. When SpongeBob comes out to save them, the Gorilla rips him in half and leaves. Other episodes include "Friend or Foe" and "SpongeBob's Big Birthday Blowout".
- Several episodes of The Three Stooges include a gorilla in the plot, which is really a person in a costume.
- In the Oct. 31, 2002, Halloween episode of the NBC series Scrubs, chief of staff Dr. Bob Kelso (Ken Jenkins) wears a gorilla suit, unbeknownst to the doctors.
- In the first season of NBC's L.A. Law, Harry Hamlin's character wooed the Susan Dey character while wearing a gorilla suit.
- Tracy, as featured on The Ghost Busters--"trained by" Bob Burns III.
- Drs. Hawkeye Pierce and Trapper John McIntyre occasionally dressed up in gorilla suits during the first three seasons of M*A*S*H
- Silver the mobster Gorilla from
- The British comedy series The Mighty Boosh features a talking gorilla named Bollo.
- The 2007 Cadbury advertising campaign Gorilla, featuring an actor in a gorilla suit playing a drum kit.
- The Canadian animated series Beast Wars features a character named Optimus Primal who transforms into a gorilla.
- The Gorilla chief of security, General Urko, served as the primary antagonist of the live-action television series Planet of the Apes while another version of the character was the primary antagonist of the animated series Return to the Planet of the Apes. Numerous other Gorilla characters also served as one-off antagonists in both series.
- The talking gorilla super-villain King Gorilla appeared in several episodes of The Venture Bros.
- Gorillas have been used as mecha/zords in the Super Sentai and Power Rangers franchises, and occasionally as the theme for a costumed hero, always filling a role of physical strength and power. Examples include Gingarilla/Gorilla Galactabeast in Seijuu Sentai Gingaman/, GaoGorilla/Kongazord in Hyakujuu Sentai Gaoranger/Power Rangers Wild Force, GekiGorilla/Gorilla Animal Spirit in Jyuken Sentai Gekiranger/Power Rangers Jungle Fury, and Cube Gorilla as well as the lead hero's muscular upgrade form, Zyuoh Gorilla in Doubutsu Sentai Zyuohger.
Video games
- George is a giant monster gorilla from the Rampage who mutated from a human in contrast to his film counterpart.
- The namesake of the Donkey Kong video game franchise and the Mario franchise is a gorilla, as is much of his supporting cast.
- The Crash Bash character Rilla Roo is a gorilla with the lower body of a kangaroo.
- Blizzard and Chaos from Primal Rage.
- Gorilla in Gekido.
- Gorilla Mask, from God Hand.
- Silverback and various apes from
- In Rogue Galaxy, there are three gorilla-like species. A gorra is a simple gorilla found in Juraika.
- The Pokémon Slaking is based on a gorilla mixed loosely with a sloth. Rillaboom, the final evolution of the Grass-type starter Pokémon from Pokémon Sword and Shield, Grookey, also greatly resembles a gorilla with elements of drummers. The region where Sword/Shield is set is intended as reference to England, making this likely a reference to the Cadbury's advert.
- A zombified gorilla, the Cosmic Silverback, appears as a boss antagonist in minigame, Dead Ops Arcade.
- Several types of gorillas appear in Everquest 2, anywhere there is jungle, or in the Shard of Fear.
- Winston, a genetically engineered Gorilla scientist, from Overwatch.
- In the Mega Man 6, Gorilla Tank was a boss.
- The Great Circus Mystery character Jungle Ape is a gorilla dressed as a savage and the boss of the second level.
Other
See also
External links
Notes and References
- Web site: Quammen . David . Book Review: Planet of the Ape -'Between Man and Beast,' by Monte Reel. April 4, 2013 . . April 6, 2013.
- Gott . Ted . Stowed Away:Emmanuel Frémiet's Gorlla Carrying Off A Woman . 2005 . Art Journal . 45 . August 19, 2017.
- Cooper, Alice. "Thrill My Gorilla." Constrictor. [S.l.]: Premium Masters, 1994.
- Dead Milkmen (Musical group). Big Lizard in My Backyard. El Segundo, CA: Restless, 1985.
- Flaming Lips. "Shaved Gorilla." Telepathic Surgery. Culver City, CA: Restless Records, 1989.
- Web site: "Occidentali's Karma" lyrics - Francesco Gabbani (Italy, Eurovision 2017). Scarpone. Cristian. 2017-02-15. Eurovision 2017 Predictions, Polls, Odds, Rankings wiwibloggs. 2017-04-08.
- Ghostface Killah. "Gorilla Hood." The Pretty Tony Collection Chapter 2. n.p., n.p., 2008
- Project Pat. "Gorilla Pimp." Mista Don't Play Everythangs Workin. New York: Hypnotize Minds/Loud Records, 2001.
- Spin Doctors. "Gorilla Boy." Here Comes the Bride. New York: DAS, 1999.
- Taylor, James. "Gorilla." Gorilla. Burbank, Calif: Warner Bros, 1975.
- Zevon, Warren. Warren Zevon. Los Angeles, Calif: Imperial, 1969.
- Zevon, Warren. "Gorilla, You're a Desperado." Bad Luck Streak in Dancing School. [Miami, Fla.]: Columbia Pictures Publications, 1980.
- Z-Ro. Screwed Up Click Representa. Houston, TX: Presidential Records, 2002.
- http://news.independent.co.uk/media/article2537369.ece Spot the link between a gorilla and chocolate