Except it’s not a rebuild of the original, but a new statue of a new design and modern construction techniques.
The Colossus was 108 feet tall, the Statue of Liberty is 111 feet tall from heel to top of head.
I think a fully restored Great Pyramid would be an impressive sight, much more so than anything still standing.
I think you answered your own question. Modern filmmakers took the legends as inspiration, and a giant guarding the harbor entrance just begs to be depicted.
Not a reproduction of the original, but a modern replacement. We can’t get the original works from this library.
That is possibly true. The description of “hanging” might, for instance, simply mean various arboreal plants hanging from the trees that were grown there. Still, I think they would be impressive. It’s one thing to see what modern technology can achieve, it’s quite another to see the original with ancient tech.
The original Ferris Wheel, for instance, would have been an amazingly impressive sight, standing 264 feet tall and having carriages with 40 chairs and able to carry 60 passengers per car. Much more impressive than the standard carnival variety. There have been larger versions built ever since, starting almost right away, and modern versions like the London Eye (443 feet) and the High Roller in Las Vegas (550 feet) dwarf it, but the original was an engineering original and superb achievement.
The Colossus probably isn’t that impressive in its own right, because we already have the Statue of Liberty, and skyscrapers abound, and it undoubtedly doesn’t live up to the greatest of its legends, such as is standing astride the harbor entrance. But for a creation of its time, it would have been an engineering marvel and a supremely impressive sight.
I struggle between a restored Great Pyramid, the Hanging Gardens, and the Colossus.