Well, there's always the Special Expanded Edition on DVD, if you don't like the theatrical version of KK05.
Seriously, though...WAY too much plus the kitchen sink, this is living proof that there is something to be said for "Less is More."
Every freaking scene was amped up to 11 in true adoring fanboy fashion, from the intro NYC scenes, the Venture's voyage to Skull Island, and so much needless and irrelevant backstory, exposition, ancillary characters. Everything had to be dripping with meaning and subtext, to the point of being utterly excruciating!
We KNOW PJ loved the '33 movie and that this was his love letter to it (not sure how that works, but okay, whatever). The technical skill that went into it is marvelous, but again, WAY too much. (the WETA statue of Kong fighting the V-Rex was pretty amazing itself, even if the movie scenes were typically over the top)
There are plenty of admirable moments, mostly dealing with Skull Island. I liked the depiction of the natives and their village here more than the other movies, but even by the time you get to this point in the movie you're just over it. The way the island was teeming with insect life and every creepy crawly thing imaginable was neat to see, the old civilization's ruins....but the downside is just like everyone said...that brontosaur stampede is horrendous. The spider pit went on for far too long, in spite of some really ghastly scenes in there. The centipede scene inside the log, though....that got to me. (ever see one of those f****rs up close?

)
And just how many crew members get offed on Skull Island? In every scene/encounter, several guys get eaten, smashed, gored, hurled, obliterated, and it seems like an endless supply of them, in spite of Carl Denham's claim in NYC where "seventeen" met horrible death. And this doesn't count the scenes ADDED back into the Special Edition.
Again, New York scenes...beautifully rendered effects, but that Central Park frozen pond scene, oy vey.
By the time we get to Empire State Building, you've just been hammered with too much THIS IS EPIC stuff...all that EPIC EPICNESS just cancels each other out.
Music was competent, but not memorable....but considering that James Newton Howard had only like 3 weeks to put it together after Howard Shore was fired, it's pretty impressive. But again, all pomp, no circumstance.
Sad, really, because we know his intentions were well and good... all the talent was there, it's unfortunate it just didn't add up. (at least they didn't film his script from his 90's attempt to make the movie. I recall seeing that somewhere years ago and it was pretty lame and deviated horribly from the original story).
... but I still prefer this over the crassness of KK76 and the whole "AMAZING ROBOT EFFECTS" debacle used in hyping that movie. (Love John Barry's score for KK76, perhaps the best thing about that movie for me)