Classics in the Dome: King Kong (1933)
Duke Street
Devonport
Plymouth
Devon
PL1 4PS
Opening Times
| Season (17 Apr 2026) | ||
|---|---|---|
| Day | Times | |
| Friday | 18:00 | - 23:00 |
Prices
Concession: £8.25 (+ booking fee)
General Admission: £9.75 (+ booking fee)
About us
Classics in the Dome: King Kong (1933)
The original giant-monster movie returns to the big screen.
King Kong is one of the most influential adventure films ever made - a thrilling mix of early special effects, ground-breaking sound design, and pure cinematic spectacle.
This screening is part of Classics in the Dome, a monthly series celebrating films whose sound, visual invention, or technical ambition deserves to be experienced on a larger scale.
Experience the classic differently:
For this event the film will be shown on a flat screen inside the Immersive Dome at Market Hall Plymouth, where the venue's 5,000-speaker sound system brings the famous roar of Kong, the pounding drums of Skull Island, and Max Steiner's pioneering orchestral score vividly to life.
Relax and watch the film from bean bags, or choose from chairs and sofas - a comfortable way to revisit a landmark of cinema in an unusual and atmospheric space.
Event details:
Date: 17 April, 2026
Film starts: 7:00pm
Bar opens: 6:00pm (and stays open until 11:00pm) - why not arrive early for a drink before the screening!
Why King Kong still matters:
When it premiered in 1933, the film stunned audiences with special effects on a scale never seen before. The stop-motion animation by Willis O'Brien created creatures that felt astonishingly alive, helping establish the visual language of fantasy and monster cinema for generations.
Fascinating film trivia
Revolutionary effects: Kong himself was animated using detailed stop-motion models, frame by frame - a technique that influenced countless filmmakers, including Ray Harryhausen.
Ground-breaking music: Max Steiner's score is often cited as one of the first full symphonic film scores, helping define how music drives tension and emotion in cinema.
Realistic miniatures: The famous Empire State Building finale used intricate miniature sets combined with live-action footage to create the illusion of enormous scale.
An instant hit: During the depths of the Great Depression, the film became a major box-office success and a cultural phenomenon.
The famous line: The film gave cinema one of its most quoted endings - "It was beauty killed the beast."
A classic worth revisiting:
Nearly a century later, King Kong remains thrilling - not just for its story, but for the ingenuity behind it.
Seeing the film with immersive sound and a large-format presentation highlights the craftsmanship and imagination that made it such a milestone.
Part of the Classics in the Dome series - celebrating films whose sound and spectacle deserve to be experienced again.
Tickets are limited. Advance booking recommended.

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