Cybersurfing: Kaiju on Crack(le)

Sci Fi Japan points us to Crackle, a new online “multi-platform next-generation video entertainment network” that is loaded with movies, television episodes, and original videos. Because Crackle is a division of Sony Pictures Entertainment Company, the have a load of titles from Columbia-TriStar, which owns the distribution rights to Toho’s giant monster movies. The current feature movie on the website’s home page is GODZILLA, MOTHRA, AND KING GHIDORAH: GIANT MONSTERS ALL-OUT ATTACK, one of the best of the new millennium G-films, thanks to director Shusuke Kaneko, who had done an excellent job of reviving Gamera in the 1990s. The website is also highlighting GODZILLA: TOKYO SOS, GODZILLA VS. KING GHIDORAH, and GODZILLA VS. MEGAGUIRAS. Other available titles include MOTHRA, GODZILLA VS. MOTHRA, and GODZILLA: FINAL WARS.
Or if you prefer other forms of cinefantastique, you can check out everything from CANDYMAN to GHOSTBUSTERS, IDLE HANDS to HEAVY METAL, STARMAN to TOY SOLDIERS, WOLF to MUPPETS IN SPACE, JUMANJI to LOOK WHO’S TALKING.
There is an option to register if you want to submit your own original videos for viewing, but you do not need to be a member to view the content, all of which is available for free. Unfortunately, this means you have to tolerate occasional commercial interrupts, but they are mercifully brief (10 seconds).
The standard video quality is acceptable, and  the stereo sound is excellent. There is an option for HD if you want to view the videos full-screen: the results are quite good, but you will need a fast Internet connection; otherwise, the video may freeze up for a few seconds now and then.
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Rodan/War of the Gargantuas – DVD Review

For kaiju(i.e. Japanese Giant Monster movies) fans, this double-bill of two of the best non-Godzilla movies represents a must-have. Featuring both the original Japanese and the revised American versions, this double-disc DVD presents these kaiju classics with the respect they have never before received on U.S. shores.
While Rodan went on to become Godzilla’s sidekick in a number of the later monster team-up movies, the original RODAN is quite a respectable achievement in its own right. This is something of a transitional film, abandoning the somber black-and-white moodiness of Toho’s earlier monster movies but still retaining the serious science fiction tone. Although shot in color, this was the last Toho kaiju in the Academy 1.33 aspect ratio. Subsequent releases from THE MYSTERIANS on were shot in the widescreen scope ratio of 2.35, and from MOTHRA onward the movies would veer toward light-hearted fantasy. Unlike many of these later kaiju efforts, RODAN shows director Ishiro Honda still striving to build an atmosphere of unease, much like the original GODZILLA.
Rodan (1956)RODAN’s storyline features a slow build-up over the discovery of the mutilated bodies of some miners on the island of Kyushu. Brave miner Shigeru (Kenji Sahara) leads an investigation but winds up getting trapped in a cave-in. The miners have been killed by some giant insect-like larvae, but when a giant pterodactyl egg hatches, the real menace -Rodan – emerges and makes quite a breakfast of the killer larvae, while leaving the observant Shigeru in a state of shock. Unlike Godzilla, who knocked buildings over with his claws or burned them with his radioactive breath, Rodan spends most of his time in the sky, creating hurricane-force winds with his wings and wreaking major devastation with the shock waves as he passes overhead. Instead of old stand-by Tokyo, the city of Saseabo gets leveled by the onslaught as Rodan is joined by a female mate. The whole thing reaches an unusual climax with a suicide pact between the monsters who plunge themselves into a growing volcano for a memorably somber finish.
This disc represents the DVD Region 1 debut of the original Japanese version of the film, which is 10 minutes longer than the truncated American version with which American fans are familiar. In addition, the Japanese version comes with stronger and brighter colors. At the same time, the American version is interesting, especially as almost the entire dialgoue track was dubbed by Paul Frees (WAR OF THE WORLDS) and Keye Luke (GREMLINS), doing different characters with stock Asian accents, and with a very young George Takei (STAR TREK) giving the English dialogue for Japanese children.
War of the GargantuasEven more exciting is the first widescreen presentation of WAR OF THE GARGANTUAS on domestic home video (previously released on a full screen laserdisc). I had originally caught up with the movie on the Million Dollar Movie as a kid, where it seemed to play every night for a week, and I enjoyed it so much that I re-watched it almost every time.
The film was created as a sequel to FRANKENSTEIN CONQUERED THE WORLD, which depicted a monster that could regenerate from a single body part, in this case resulting in two monsters. Both retain a flat-topped Frankenstein-type dome and headpiece, but American producer Henry G. Saperstein decided to rename the monsters “Gargantuas” and obscured the continuity.1In the Japanese version, after the revelation that there are two Frankensteins, the monsters are given the names to distinguish them: Sanda (brown one) and Gaira (evil green one, spelled “Gailah” in the English subtitles). The Japanese version is actually 4 minutes shorter than the American cut and has a darker picture quality.
War of the GargantuasWAR OF THE GARGANTUAS has an intriguing opening: in the midst of a rainstorm, a giant octopus attacks a Japanese freighter; helps seems to arrive when a Green Gargantua pries the octopus away, but instead of rescuing the sailors, the monster starts eating them. We are then introduced to Dr. Paul Stewart (a likeable but indifferent Russ Tamblyn, replacing Nick Adams who starred in FRANKENSTEIN CONQUERS THE WORLD) and his beautiful assistant Akemi (Kumi Mizuno, returning from FCW), who refuse to believe that the carnivorous beast could have been the baby Brown Gargantua (looking much like LAND OF THE LOST’s Chaka) they had nurtured until he ran away.2
It’s not long before the Green Gargantua emerges from Tokyo Bay and ambles across Haneda airport where he devours a female office worker. The American version adds a shot of the worker’s chewed clothing, but the Japanese version cuts poignantly to some flowers on the ground. Green Gargantua runs away when sunlight emerges from behind some clouds, returning at night to pick up a Caucasian lounge singer warbling the memorably awful song “The Words Get Stuck in My Throat” (sung in English in both versions), whom he drops when all the nightclub lights are turned on.
One distinction for GARGANTUAS is that, for once, the Japanese military prove somewhat effective. They bring out their giant Maser cannons and do some damage on Green Gargantua  before he gets away to wrestle around the city with his better-natured brother, Sanda. Also notable: after this film and DESTROY ALL MONSTERS, Toho decided to save money on miniature buildings by setting their monster rumbles in the countryside rather than in cities, rendering GARGANTUAS one of the last epics of destruction before Godzilla was revived in the ‘80s.
The print of WAR OF THE GARGANTUAS is bright and vibrant, though there are some rare instances of aliasing problems due to compression. The sound is good overall, though Gailah’s chirping noises can remind one of a French rooster and begin to grate on the nerves after a while. The Japanese soundtrack presents Akira Ifukubie’s complete score (with a great march like the one the composer wrote for DESTROY ALL MONSTERS); the American version replaces some of the original score with library music.
A great bonus feature is BRINGING GODZILLA DOWN TO SIZE, written and produced by GODZILLA experts Ed Godziszewski and Steve Ryfle. Though it has some pacing problems, the documentary gives us behind-the-scenes stories concerning Eiji Tsuburaya (special effects supervisor) and art director Yasuyuki Inoue (miniature city designer and unsung hero of kaiju movies), as well as commentary and reminiscences from Haruo Nakajima, Kenpachiro Satsuma and Tsutomu “Tom” Kitagawa, who played Godzilla in the ‘50s-‘70s, ’80-‘90s, and GODZILLA 2000 on, each explaining and demonstrating their interpretation of the character as well as offering anecdotes about difficulties and near accidents, especially in Toho’s large water set. While similar features have been included on Japanese import DVDs (sans English subtitles), it is great to see a number of Japanese artists who worked on kaiju movies and hear their stories in a feature-length documentary.
This set is highly recommended to all lovers of kaiju eiga!
RODAN/WAR OF THE GARGANTUAS. Classic Media release through Genius Entertainment.

  • RODAN (Sora no Daikiaju Radon [“Rodan, Monster from the Sky”], 1956). Directed by Ishiro Honda. Written by Takeshi Kimura and Takeo Murata from a story by Ken Kuronuma; English dialogue by David Duncan. Cast: Kenji Sahara, Yumi Shirakawa, Akihiko Harata, Akio Kohori.
  • WAR OF THE GARGANTUAS (Furankenshutain no Kaiju [“Frankenstein’s Monsters: Sanda versus Gaira“], 1966). Directed by Ishiro Honda. Written by Ishiro Honda and Takeshi Kimura, story by Reuben Bercovitch. Cast: Russ Tamblyn, Kumi Mizuno, Nobuo Nakamura, Kenji Sahara, Jun Tazaki.

FOOTNOTES:

  1. The original trailer for WAR OF THE GARGANTUAS (which unfortunately is not included in this set) was constructed from takes featuring the dialogue recorded on set, with the Japanese cast speaking their native language and imported American star Russ Tamblyn speaking in English. This reveals that the decision to rename the monsters for American consumption was not a last-minute change made while dubbing the American version – Tamblyn can be heard calling the monsters “Gargantuas” while his Japanese co-stars call them “Frankenstein.”
  2. The existence of this flashback creates some continuity problems, because it does not comform precisely to what we saw in FRANKENSTEIN CONQUERS THE WORLD, which featured a very human-looking monster, not the bigfoot-like creature seen here. The scene seems to exist for the benefit of the American version, which pretends to be a stand-alone film.

Gamera the Brave – Review

A new, cute Gamera faces off against the man-eatin Jidas.

Finally released on DVD, this 2006 film one breaks continuity and abandons the adult tone of the well received 1990s GAMERA trilogy directed by Shusuke Kaneko (GAMERA, GUARDIAN OF THE UNIVERSE, GAMERA VS. LEGION, GAMERA 3: REVENGE OF IRYS), in favor of returning to the childish tone of the campy 1960s movies. As bad as that sounds, the result is not as bad as it sounds. GAMERA THE BRAVE is actually a pretty decent kids movie that has special effects and production values on par with its immediate predecessors, even as the script shifts the emphasize onto younger characters.
The film starts with the Gamera made familiar in the previous films self-destructing in order to defeat a pack of the flying Gayos monsters that are about to get the better of him. (This sequence looks as if it were originally designed to suggest a continuity with the ending of GAMERA 3, which had the giant flying turtle marching off to face a swarm of these monsters; however, the opening of GAMERA THE BRAVE is set way back in 1973, decades before the ending of REVENGE OF IRYS.) Over thirty years later, a young lad discovers an egg from which a new Gamera hatches. The middle of the film is actually quite funny as the tiny turtle grows larger overnight, displays abnormally intelligence for a reptile, and begins to display the familiar powers (flying, spitting fireballs. etc).
Things turn from amusing to exciting when Jidas, a new man-eating monster, arises, and Gamera, sensing his destiny to be a protector of mankind, turns from being a friendly pet to being a faithful guard dog. The new opponent, perhaps not unintentionally, seems to resemble the Sony 1998 Godzilla; it’s a very effective, frightening design, that is perfectly realized with a combination of suit-mation, puppetry, and CGI. Unfortunately, the new Gamera design is a disappointment, replacing the fierce look of the defender of Earth with a kid-friendly face featuring big blue eyes, like something out of a bad anime.
The special effects are mostly good, although the miniature work is apparent at times. The acting and script are better than expected, considering that the appeal is mostly to kids. Things only really start to fall apart near the end. There is a cornball sequence wherein a string of kids act as a sort of relay to carry an object that will revive Gamera (kind of like spinach for Popeye) so that he can defeat his opponent. This is just barely works, in a cornball kind of way. But then it really gets bad when our hero finally delivers the object (a scarlet pearl) but first gives a long speech demanding that the turtle not self-destruct in order to kill the monster that’s eating people left and right. As if this were not bad enough, there’s an even cornier moment after that battle, when all the children cordon off Gamera to keep the authorities at bay, so that the turtle can fly away to fight another day.
Despite these missteps, the film is mostly entertaining – a good effort for parents to watch with their children. As if realizing that the baby Gamera was the most endearing part of the movie, the final credits rolls with outtakes running on the left side of the screen, with the tiny creature wandering around looking cute. All in all, GAMERA THE BRAVE succeeds where Takashi Miike’s GREAT YOKAI WAR (another Japanese fantasy film aimed at children) fails, because the filmmakers did not treat the material with contempt but instead tried to make the best of it.

DVD DETAILS

U.S. kaiju fans finally got a chance to see GAMERA THE BRAVE on DVD when Media Blasters released it under their Tokyo Shock label on December 30, 2003.
GAMERA THE BRAVE (a.k.a. Chisaki Yusha Tachi – Gamera [“Little Braves of Gamera”], 2006). Directed by Yurta Tazaki. Written by Yukari Tatsui. Cast: kaho, Kanji Tsuda, Susumu Terajima, Ryo Tomioka.

Laserblast: Blu-ray Releases of Serenity, Truman Show, Ghost, Event Horizon

With Blu-ray having won the High-Def war against HD-DVD, more and more familiar titles are re-emerging on video store shelves, this time in the new format. Although the number of science fiction, fantasy, and horror films released on disc is low this week, the few that are available offer worthwhile examples of this phenomenon.

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Serenity (Blu-ray)
It’s a measure of the power wielded in Hollywood by Joss Whedon that he was able to orchestrate the resurrection of his own television show – Firefly – cancelled by Fox after airing only 11 of the 14 filmed episodes. Using the admittedly strong sales of the series’ DVD box set, Whedon was able to convince Universal to gamble on a modestly budgeted feature, Serenity. Firefly took place 500 years in the future and centered on the crew of the vessel Serenity, smugglers who skirt the authority of the Alliance, the governing force that exerts a fascistic control over the planets in the central area of the solar system. To stay out of reach, the Serenity keeps mostly to the outer-rim planets that exist somewhat outside the authority of the Alliance in a futuristic version of the American Wild West, conforming to Whedon’s goal of creating a Stagecoach-like drama with a sci-fi backdrop. Firefly’s brief 2002 run was critically praised and generated a voracious fan base that quickly developed separation anxiety for their beloved show following its cancellation. But unlike Star Trek fans, they would only have to wait 3 years for their favorite show to move to the big screen – Serenity picked up only months after the final episode of the show with the crew (all of whom are reunited for the feature) once again caught between the Alliance and the dreaded Reavers, a group of mutated humans that resemble a cross between Orcs and the cannibal family from The Hills Have Eyes. While those not familiar with the series will have to hit the ground running to keep up with all the characters and situations, writer-director Whedon does an admirable job in making the show accessible to newcomers (the full-series set has recently become available on Blu-ray as well).
Serenity was one of the earliest HD-DVD releases, and was probably enough to sway numerous early adopters into backing the wrong horse. It was one of the better looking 2007 releases and it appears that the new Blu-ray doesn’t disappoint more than a year later – the transfer is fully faithful to the original cinematography (both Serenity and Firefly were designed to have a rougher look than most space operas) and the temptation to boost the many dark sequences has been resisted. Happily, Universal has attempted to make further amends by including not just the supplemental material previously available on the DVD and HD-DVD releases (included here in space saving SD format), but also throwing in several new features that are exclusive to Blu-ray. The highlights of the previous releases include 2 audio commentary tracks, one featuring Joss Whedon solo and the second paring Whedon with Firefly crewman Nathan Fillion, Summer Glau, Ron Glass (Boy, The New Odd Couple was a long time ago, wasn’t it?) and Adam Baldwin along with the requisite deleted scenes, gag reel, and better than usual production featurettes. Exclusive to Blu-ray features include an optional PIP version of the Whedon & cast commentary track, an introduction by Whedon, more featurettes, extended scenes, and several more accessible through Universal’s clumsy “U-Control” technology. Recommended. [EDITOR’S NOTE: You can read a somewhat less favorable review of the old DVD release here.]
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The Truman Show (Blu-ray)
Remember back when the worst you could expect from a “serious” Jim Carrey feature was The Truman Show? Carrey was riding high on a string of ‘anything for a laugh’ movies, including Ace Ventura and The Mask when he took his first chance on edgier material with the Ben Stiller-directed The Cable Guy in 1996. The film did okay, but didn’t generate half the repeat business of Carrey’s earlier efforts. The Cable Guy is actually a pretty interesting show, even though it seemed to be hedging its bets by not letting Carrey’s obsessive (and clearly dangerous) character dwell too long in the darkness, leaving most audiences with a neither-here-nor-there feeling. It’s quite possible that Carrey was smarting from the experience when he signed on for The Truman Show two years later. The alarmingly prophetic tale of Truman Burbank (Carrey) adopted by a television network and raised – without his knowledge – on a hit reality show seemed farfetched 10 years ago, but with primetime television choked with Survivors, Bachelors, and Nannies, it seems almost quaint in 2008. Director Peter Weir was an inspired choice to helm – a sensitive filmmaker whose best work (Gallipoli, Witness, The Year of Living Dangerously) far outweighs a single misstep (coughGreen Cardcough). He knew exactly how to reshape Carrey’s rubber-faced screen persona into a sensitive, likeable leading man. The Blu-ray carries over the same set of supplemental features as the previous DVD release, including a two-part ‘Making Of’ feature, deleted scenes, and 2 theatrical trailers (the only supplements presented in HD)
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Ghost (Blu-ray)
For those trying to get their wife and/or girlfriend interested in HD media, this is probably the best place to start – a movie so hardwired into the central nervous system of American women that it granted an unconditional career extension to Whoopi Goldberg (admittedly good in her Oscar winning role) that we’re still forced to live with today. Wipe away the weepy, Lifetime Network moss that has stuck to the film in the nearly 20 years since its release and you’ll find a genuinely sweet and well filmed story of banker Sam Wheat (the always watchable Patrick Swayze) who is taken from young bride Molly (Demi Moore, whose newly cropped hair and gamine look became one of the most successful image makeovers of the decade) after being fatally shot during a mugging. Sam, however, won’t pass on to the “other side” until he can warn Molly that the mugging was actually planned – a botched robbery attempt that has left Moll in great danger. The crowd-pleasing comic scenes of Sam attempting to communicate to Molly through a phony spiritualist (Goldberg) are still quite funny, and you’d have to be a pretty sour Sue to not get a little teary during the show’s final scenes – just don’t start TiVo-ing The View, or there will be blood. This “Collector’s Edition” carries over the commentary track from director Jerry Zucker ( who went from Airplane and Top Secret! to Ghost and First Knight) and writer Bruce Joel Rubin (JACOB’S LADDER) that was recorded many moons ago for the initial release, and adds a new retrospective featurette that includes new interviews with Swayze, but only stock EPK footage of Moore and Goldberg (who really ought to pull out of anything short of major surgery to help sell this film).
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Event Horizon (Blu-ray)
An impressive calling card for director Paul W. S. Anderson when first released in 1997, Event Horizon was an impressive blending of Sci-Fi space opera with a haunted house horror film. Set only a half century in the future (and showing lots of faith in an accelerated space program), the film follows the crew of the “Lewis and Clark” on a rescue mission to find the “Event Horizon”, lost 7 years prior on its maiden voyage. Once found, vague life form readings are detected, though no sign of the ship’s crew or any hint to their fate is evident. But as the crew spends more time aboard the derelict craft they find their own deepest fears being played upon while the mental state of scientist and Horizon designer Dr. Weir (Sam Neill in full eye-rolling mode) degenerates amid ramblings about the nature of Hell. It seems that the Event Horizon has brought something back from the edge of the universe. Watching Event Horizon today gives the viewer a keen sense of the debt owed to Ridley Scott’s Alien in the way outer space is depicted on screen. From the industrial design details of the ship itself to the familiar blue collar crew, it’s almost impossible to imagine what subsequent Sci-Fi shows would look like without Scott’s film to be used as a visual template. The horror elements of Event Horizon have an equal part share in the body-horror works of HP Lovecraft and Clive Barker, but without the thematic depths of either. What’s left is a visually sumptuous but intellectually hollow interstellar ghost story – albeit one with a fine cast, including a post-Larry, pre-Morpheus Lawrence Fishburn, the always interesting Jason Isaacs, and an underused Kathleen Quinlan. The Blu-ray is the first HD go-around for the title, and all the extras present on the previous disc release have been ported over, including a commentary track with director Anderson and producer Jeremy Bolt and several featurettes.
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Hellbound: Hellraiser II (20th Anniversary Edition)
Anchor Bay once again raids their vaults and re-releases another of their horror mainstays for its 20th Anniversary. In 1987, Clive Barker adapted his own work to the screen and managed to craft one of the most effective and profoundly disturbing horror films of the decade. The first (of many) inferior sequels makes the mistake that so many other sequels do, and makes its subject the instrument of death (the truly horrific looking Cenobites) instead of the humans whose moral weaknesses allow them entry into our world. Spotting a franchise in the making, director Tony Randel – presumably with the complicity of Barker – took the first step toward making head Cenobite ‘Pinhead’ (the wonderful Doug Bradley) into a wisecracking horror icon in the mold of Freddy Kruger (a move that would come to fruition in Hellrasier III: Hell on Earth). This special edition SD-DVD retains the earlier edition’s commentary track with director Randel, writer Peter Atkins, and star Ashley Lawrence and throws in several new featurettes.
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Gamera the Brave
The 12th film in the Gamera series (released in Japan in 2006) arrives on domestic DVD this week – the first from the Kadokawa studio since purchasing of the rights to the series from Daiei several years back. We have no details as to video quality or supplements, but arriving from the dependable Media Blasters/Tokyo Shock (excellent product, but a virtually un-viewable website), the best can be expected.
Also out this week: An American Carol, a failed attempt to lampoon Michael Moore, arrives on DVD after its quick exist from theatres. And if you do not already own E.T. – The Extra Terrestrial, it is being released on DVD again in full screen and widescreen “Movie Cash” versions, which include passes that will get you into theatres to see your choice of Milk or Frost/Nixon.
All of these titles – and more – are available in the Cinefantastique Online Store.

Cybersurfing: Mothra attacks Olympics

Mothra attacks BeijingThe Sportsman’s Daily has a reasonably amusing satirical post about the closing ceremonies of the Olympics being ruined by Mothra:

After pulling off spectacular opening and closing ceremonies during the 2008 Summer Olympics, the city of Beijing was met with unexpected disaster immediately after the Olympic torch was extinguished. Movie monster Mothra attacked the city on its way home to Japan.
“I was on my way home from Monster Island for a little weekend get together with Godzilla, Rodan, and Varan and decided to kill some time by wreaking havoc on one of my favorite cities,” said Mothra. “We had all just watched A Clockwork Orange, and I was really pumped for a little senseless ultra-violence. Sorry if I ruined everybody’s day.”

The post gets extra credit for referencing Varan, a rather obscure member of the Japanese monster club, but we do ponder the reason for casting Mothra as the monster of destruction in this tale. Also, the article assumes that Mothra is male, whereas the films present the creature as feminine.

Laserblast: Golden Compass, Godzilla, Dark Shadows & Slashers

This week’s home video offerings include a a big-budget disappointment, the further adventures of Japan’s most famous mon-star, the early adventures of a long-running soap opera, and the bloody adventures of a couple of psycho killers. The high-profile release is THE GOLDEN COMPASS, New Line’s failed attempt to create another blockbuster fantasy franchise in the mode of THE LORD OF THE RINGS. Defenders tried to blame the underwhelming box office performance on religious controversy, but the film, while not too bad, has more enough flaws to make any other explanation unnecessary: it is a bit bland in its efforts to avoid offending anyone (shying away from the controversy surrounding the books), and screenplay crams in way too many plot elements that do not pay off but simply set up sequels (which now Continue reading “Laserblast: Golden Compass, Godzilla, Dark Shadows & Slashers”

Eiji Tsuburaya: Master of Monsters – Book Review

Eiji Tsuburaya, the special effects director responsible for the classic Toho monster movies, is a figure of major importance in the history of Japanese fantasy films. Inspired by the stop-motion special effects of Willis O’Brien (e.g. 1933’s KING KONG), Tsuburaya yearned to create his own movie monster, and he finally got his chance when producer Tomoyuki Tanaka asked him to handle the special effects for GOJIRA (1954, released in the U.S. as GODZILLA, KING OF THE MONSTER). The success of that film led to a literal tidle wave of sci-fi extravaganzas: RODAN, THE MYSTERIANS, MOTHRA, MATANGO. Although Tsuburaya’s work was in some ways less technically sophisticated than his idol O’Brien’s (working on smaller budgets, Tsuburaya had to utilize men in suits rather than animated puppets), the Japanese effects director nevertheless made his mark, establishing a recognizable style that was always entertaining if not completely convincing. In particular, the suit-mation approach allowed for the creation of larger miniatures, which could be spectacularly destroyed in slow-motion, yielding a level of on-screen mayhem impossible to achieve with the more expensive – and much slower – stop-motion process.
Tsuburaya’s life and career are the subject of Eiji Tsuburaya: Master of Monsters, which carries the lengthy subtitle Defending the Earth with Ultraman, Godzilla and Friends in the Golden Age of Japanese Science Fiction Film. This is an impressively extensive coffee table book, loaded with countless colorful photographs of monster mayhem and behind-the-scenes wizardry. Fans will find it a delight just to leaf through it, and even hardcore collectors are likely to find more on view here than ever met they eye before.
Author August Ragone does fine job of capturing the Tsuburaya story, from his early life and start in the film industry, through his work providing miniatures for Japanese battle movies during World War II, into the movie monsters that made him famous, and through the television productions (e.g., ULTRA-Q, ULTRA-7) that took once-frightening sci-fi monstrosities and turned them into kiddie fodder. The main narrative is occasionally interrupted by sidebar articles (some written by other experts in the field, such as Norman Englund and Ed Godziszewski), which provide different perspectives on Tsuburaya and his work.
Ragone delivers the information with all the enthusiasm of a devoted fan – an enthusiasm that (far from being annoying) sweeps the reader along like a boat in the rapids. Unfortunately, the book is thinly sourced and short on first-hand interviews; it frequently reads as if Ragone had simply read all the existing material on the subject, collated it, and summarized it. Consequently, you will not find the “you are there” perspective of, for example, Stuart Galbraith IV’s Monsters Are Attacking Tokyo.
Also, you will not learn much that is new about Tsuburaya’s movie magic. Ragone tends to wax understandably enthusiastic about “beautiful matte paintings” and “exquisitely detailed miniatures,” but there is little specific detail about how the special effects were achieved. When he does get descriptive, his prose can be confusing, as when he writes that the destruction of a bridge in RODAN “could only be shot once because of the precise timing required.” This seems to state the matter backwards: precise timing was required because the complicated action, filmed from multiple angles, needed to be captured in a single take.


Ragone never comes to grips with the gradual decline of Tsuburaya’s work; in fact, he barely even acknowledges it. As feature film budgets shrank, fewer miniatures were built and destroyed, and fewer composite shots were used to combine miniatures, monsters, and live-action. On top of this, Tsuburaya began to anthropomorphize his monsters, turning them into comical clowns instead of fearsome behemoths. (Think of the three-way monster conversation in GHIDORAH, THE THREE-HEADED MONSTER or Godzilla’s victory dance in MONSTER ZERO.) This kind of hijinx remains popular with fans, but it lowers the films down to a level of colorful camp that is notably inferior to the early black-and-white nightmare of GOJIRA.
What we are left with feels a bit like an authorized biography, with all the warts carefully air-brushed out. Nevertheless, the book remains enjoyably readable from start to finish. Fans of Japanese giant monsters will undoubtedly want to purchase it. The illustrations alone are worth the price, but once readers start to peruse the text, they will find themselves serenaded by a kindred spirit who captures the wild-eyed childish devotion born of many hours in front of the television set, watching wonderfully weird movies and television shows that ignorant unbelievers thoughtlessly dismiss. In adulthood, it is easy to forget that enthusiastic joy, but Ragone brings it back to life, like a bolt of lightening reviving a long-dormant Godzilla.

Ultraman: The Next (2004) – Film Review

This feature film takes the premise of the old Ultraman television series and updates it to a contemporary cinematic idiom. Gone are the simple sets and the futuristic, artificial feel of the various TV incarnations – which were colorful and fun in a kiddie-kind-of-way, but also a bit cheesy and often goofy. ULTRAMAN: THE NEXT combines traditional suit-mation and miniatures with modern computer-generated imagery to create an exciting new version of the tale that is slightly more mature while still retaining its appeal to youngsters.
In this version, our hero Maki is not a part of an elite force defending the Earth from alien monsters; he is a jet fighter pilot who wants to quit his job so that he can spend more time with his wife and five-year-old son (who has a blood disease that might kill him within a year). Unfortunately, fate intervenes in the form of a glowing meteor, which crashes into the fighter jet, turning Maki into Ultraman (although he does not realize this for a while, because the film treats his condition as a puzzle that must be solved). Continue reading “Ultraman: The Next (2004) – Film Review”

Gojira (1954)/Godzilla, King of the Monsters (1956) – Film & DVD Review

To the average American audience, the original Godzilla is a cheesy man-in-a-suit monster smashing cardboard buildings and stomping matchbox-size cars – something so bad that atrocious computer-generated lizard in 1998’s American-made GODZILLA is actually perceived as an improvement. Science fiction fans may be a bit kinder in their assessment, acknowledging that Godzilla’s debut film is much better than the sequels that followed, but even they tend to rank the Japanese giant well below his American counterparts. In Japan, however, the original 1954 GODZILLA is considered to be a classic on par with KING KONG (1933).
Unfortunately, for decades, GODZILLA (known as GOJIRA in its native land, a combination of the English word “gorilla” and the Japanese word for whale, “kurji”) was seen stateside only in a heavily Americanized version, released in 1956 under the title GODZILLA, KING OF THE MONSTERS. Since Rialto Pictures released the Japanese version in select U.S. theatres in 2004, in time for its 50th anniversary, American audiences have finally been able to appreciate the uncut, undubbed original. Those expecting a campy kiddie film were surprised to see a slow and somber mini-masterpiece, a black-and-white nightmare about the threat of nuclear annihilation – in short, a classic example of popular entertainment working as a serious metaphor.

A fishing boat incinerated by nuclear radiation
A fishing boat incinerated by nuclear radiation

GODZILLA* dramatizes nuclear horror unlike any other film of its period, because the fantasy element is clearly standing in for a reality too horrible to contemplate directly. In a cinematic world filled with denial regarding the lethal use of nuclear weapons, Godzilla stands as reminder not only of Hiroshima and Nagasaki but also of the unfortunate fishing boat, The Lucky Dragon, which was irradiated by nuclear fallout from the U.S. test of an H-Bomb in 1954. This incident, which resulted in the subsequent death of a crew member from Leukemia, was as much an inspiration for the making of GODZILLA as were the obvious American antecedents, KING KONG and THE BEAST FROM 20,000 FATHOMS (1953).
Like many classic monster movies, GODZILLA gradually builds to the revelation of its title character, then keeps it mostly off-screen. Instead, the focus is on the human characters, who wrestle with the impact that Godzilla’s destruction has on their lives (something to which the film’s post-war Japanese audience could easily relate). The story even presents a genuine moral dilemma: should Dr. Serizawa (Akihiko Harrata) use his Oxygen Destroyer to defeat Godzilla and, in the process, possibly reveal to the world a weapon even more devastating than the thing it’s meant to defeat? Or should he keep his weapon a secret? The question (at least in the original Japanese version) isn’t really whether the device will fall into the wrong hands; Serizawa has learned the painful lesson of Robert Oppenheimer: once the device is in any hands, its creator can no longer control it, and its use is almost inevitable.
New footage, with Frank Inagawa (center) and Raymond Burr (right) was added for the American release.
New footage, with Frank Inagawa (center) and Raymond Burr (right) was added for the American release.

The subtitled prints distributed by Rialto Pictures present the 1954 GODZILLA as it was released in Japan by Toho Studios. There are substantial differences between this and the dubbed American version, GODZILLA, KING OF THE MONSTERS. The subtitle “KING OF THE MONSTERS” was not the only addition; there were also new scenes with Raymond Burr playing American reporter Steve Martin (yes, his use of the name predates the famous comedian by decades).
This footage provided an audience identification figure who could narrate events, bridge continuity gaps caused by the re-editing, and explain what was going on (despite the dubbing of the lead characters, much of the supporting cast’s Japanese dialogue remained intact, while Burr’s footage was filmed and intercut to look as if his character were standing on the sidelines, having the conversations translated to him). To be fair, the American version was not a complete bastardization but a reasonable attempt to present a new and unfamiliar piece of filmmaking to an audience that needed some kind of bridge to cross the cultural gap. In at least one small way, the U.S. version improves on the multi-character scenario of the original: by using Burr’s reporter as a central viewpoint, the plot threads are tied up and presented much more clearly to the audience.
The aftermath of Godzilla rampage deliberately evokes Hiroshima and Nagasaki
The aftermath of Godzilla rampage deliberately evokes Hiroshima and Nagasaki

In every other way, however, the Japanese version is superior. With an opening scene that consciously recalls the fate of the unfortunate Lucky Dragon (a fishing boat is incinerated by a blinding nuclear flash from beneath the sea), the film intends to convey a shocking sense of the consequences of atomic weapons. Unlike the reassuring tone of American films of the period, which suggested that any nuclear aberrations could be dispatched by the same science that created them, GOJIRA offers no such consolation.
Director and co-writer Ishiro Honda (himself a war veteran) tried to capture a realistic sense of war-like devastation, a warning of what was bound to happen since the nuclear genie had been unleashed from the bottle. Aided by Eija Tsuburaya’s special effects and Akira Ifukube’s dramatic music, Honda went a long way toward achieving his goal, but much of the impact was mitigated in the American release, which not only added Burr’s scenes but also deleted several sequences (U.S. prints ran less than 80 minutes, approximately twenty minutes short of the original).


The restored footage helps fill out the characterization and ground the story in a convincing sense of reality. Several previously unseen moments stand out: the clarification that the film’s morally conflicted Dr. Serizawa lost his eye in WWII, meaning he’s a war hero; Serizawa’s overheated insistence that he “has no German friends” (he doth protest too much, making one wonder whether in fact he is not in touch with ex-Nazi scientists he might have met during the war); the insistence by paleontologist Dr. Yamane’s (SEVEN SAMURAI’s Takashi Shimura) that Godzilla is worth studying because he is capable of surviving an H-bomb (something that should be of interest to the only country ever to suffer a nuclear attack).
Of the restored scenes, most memorable is a brief dialogue aboard a train: when a male passenger jokes that his girlfriend will be the first victim should Godzilla appear in Tokyo, she responds, “Not me. Not after I survived the bomb at Nagasaki.” One shouldn’t overemphasize the impact of this scene (as filmed, it’s almost a throwaway) but the fact that it was deleted from American prints for decades lends its reappearance here the uncomfortable cutting edge, reminding viewers that Godzilla exists because of America’s nuclear attacks on civilian populations.
In other cases, subtitles enhance scenes that were visible but not translated in the U.S. version. In one scene, a mother hopelessly huddles with her two children on the sidewalk; with nowhere left to run from Godzilla’s rampage, the only comfort she can offer to her offspring is, “We’ll be with your father soon. We’ll see him in heaven.” In the second, as a crowd of evacuees stands near the shore, one orphaned character repeats, “Damn it!” while helplessly watching Godzilla overturn a bridge on its way back to the ocean. Unlike later Godzilla sequels, which filmed endless monster battles as if they were a wrestling matches staged atop a toy train set, moments like these keep the camera at eye level with the human characters, so that the special effects never become mere fun-filled spectacle. This is a film that makes you want to cringe at the destruction on screen, not applaud the ingenuity of the technicians.

Low-key lighting obscures flaws in the suit-mation effects.
Low-key lighting obscures flaws in the suit-mation effects.

This approach helps overcome the flaws in the special effects. The film’s “suit-mation” technology has always been derided by American purists, who preferred the stop-motion techniques used by Willis O’Brien and Ray Harryhausen (in which puppets with metal armatures are filmed one frame at a time). But the use of a man-in-a-suit, stomping around a detailed miniature cityscape, allowed for scenes of destruction that would have been impossible to achieve with the painstakingly slow stop-motion process. Filmed with low-key lighting to suggest the nighttime attacks, Gojira’s raids on Tokyo achieve a wonderfully moody atmosphere that does not quite blind the eye to the occasionally visible wires, but does incline one to forgive the mistakes in favor of appreciating the overall tone.
That’s because these sequences have a cumulative effect that is more impressive than anything scene in the 1998 American blockbuster. Edited together with shots that are always dramatic (even when not convincing), the imperfections fly by almost too fast to register. Thanks to fast-paced editing and stark photography, Godzilla’s rampage conveys a sense of approaching, inevitable doom as no other special effects sequence ever has. With numerous composite shots to put Godzilla in the frame with his human victims, the sense of danger is conveyed unlike anything in any subsequent sequels. The achievement is best illustrated, perhaps, by the brief moment when television cameras atop a tower broadcast long shots of the Tokyo skyline engulfed in a sea of flames. The reporter on the scene insists to his viewers (and by extension to the film’s actual audience) that this “is not a play or a motion picture!” Of course, we know it really is a movie, but we get the message: the film is telling us to take what we’re seeing seriously, and for perhaps for the one and only time in a Godzilla film, we do.

 DVD DETAILS

click to purchase
click to purchase

Classic Media’s two-disc DVD contains both versions of the film, plus some nice bonus features. The DVDs are packaged in a lovely box that, intentionally or not, suggest the look of import DVDs of the film that you used to find in specialty stores like Anime Jungle in the Little Tokyo district of Los Angeles. Inside the box there is a glossy sixteen-page booklet, featuring a few publicity photographs from the film, along with an excellent essay on the film’s history by Steve Ryfle (author of Japan’s Favorite Mon-Star: The Unauthorized Biography of the “Big G).
Disc One contains GOJIRA(divided into 24 chapter stops), plus a handful of extras: an audio commentary, two featurettes, and a Japanese trailer.
Both featurettes consist of voice-over narration illustrated by publicity stills and/or storyboard artwork. The first documents the development of the story (along with the many changes that occurred betwixt conception and final execution). The second performs a similar service regarding the design and construction of the Godzilla suit. Both are so informative that even well-read fans may find much they do not already know, and the absence of on-screen interviews is hardly felt, thanks to the effective use of still images to illustrate the spoken text.
The audio commentary by Steve Ryfle and Ed Godziszewski fares slightly less well. If you have read books are articles by either of these two experts, you are likely to hear much that is familiar, especially during the early portions of the film, when the discussion examines the general background of the film, rather than scene-specific details. Fortunately, as the two authors delve deeper into the subject, they mine details and offer opinions that should entertain and enlighten the faithful. In one case, they even point out a special effect that I had never noticed, despite watching the film numerous times: when the villagers on Odo Island respond to the alarm bell by running up hill, you can see Godzilla’s footprints in the hillside.
Ryfle and Godziszewski make a solid argument for considering the film as a classic, and they do a good job of underlining the film’s themes, particularly as they are expressed in the conflicted character of Dr. Serizawa, a scientist whose invention can destroy Godzilla – but only at the potential cost of releasing an even more dangerous superweapon upon the world. They also acknowledge the film’s flaws (e.g., the miniature missiles bouncing off the painted sky in the background) without undermining their central thesis, that the film is a somber work worthy of serious consideration.
Disc Two contains GODZILLA, KING OF THE MONSTERS (divided into a meager 9 chapter stops), a U.S. trailer, and another audio commentary by Ryfle and Godziszewski.
Unlike the Japanese trailer, which emphasizes the somber tone of the film, the American trailer is awash in enthusiastic hyberbole that is not only rather infectious but also gives a good idea of the diverging approach the American produces took when preparing the film for U.S. audiences, tightening the pace and emphasizing the action, so that the result emerged looking rather like a typical American sci-fi film from the period.
The audio commentary on this re-tooled version of the film is perhaps more interesting, because there is so much ground to cover in terms of pointing out the changes made and discussing the details of transplanting Gojira/Godzilla from Japan to America. Ryfle and Godziszewski are joined at different points by Ted Newsom and Terry Morse, Jr (son of the man who directed the new American footage), and Ryfle also plays audio excerts from interviews he conducted with some of the people involved in purchasing the rights to distribute the film in the U.S.
Ogata (Akira Takarada, center) and Emiko (Momoko Kochi, right) convince Dr. Serizawa (Akihiko Hirata, lest) to use his Oxygen Destroyer against Godzilla.
Ogata amd Emiko (Akira Takarada and Momoko Kochi, center) convince Serizawa (Akihiko Hirata, left) to use his Oxygen Destroyer against Godzilla.

Although Ryfle and Godziszewski obviously prefer the original GOJIRA, they treat the Americanized version with respect, even pointing out a few instances when it improves upon the original, such as Ogata’s line to convince Serizawa to use the Oxygen Destroyer against the monster: “You have your fear, which may become reality. And you have Godzilla, which is reality.”
Perhaps the most salient point that the duo make is that, although GODZILLA, KING OF THE MONSTERS may seem like a bastardization of the original, it nonetheless deserves its place in film history because its success helped launch the Japanes giant monster craze that followed. GOJIRA may be the superior version, but it never would have played in local theatres across America. By adding Raymond Burr as a reporter-narrator, director Morse and company gave the film a much needed Occidental point-of-view that allowed audiences a way of seeing into the Japanese world of the film.
Unfortunately, as essential as this DVD set is, it is not quite perfect. GODZILLA, KING OF THE MONSTERS lacks subtitles of any kind, making it difficult to follow the story while listening to the audio commentary (something I prefer to do). The subtitles on GOJIRA are of a slightly dull color, making them sometimes hard to read depending on the background image. Both prints are in good shape, having been struck relatively recently, but the sad fact is that that film may never be seen in pristine form again, thanks to wear and tear on the negative that especially rears its ugly head during the special effects scenes.
Ryfle and Godziszewski make a gaffe or two. In the GOJIRA commentary, Godziszewski refers to a shot (of a mother huddling with her children during Gojira’s night-time raid on Tokyo) as missing from the American version, which is incorrect. Fortunately, in the GODZILLA, KING OF THE MONSTERS commentary, Ryfle rightly points out that the shot is there; it is simply not subtitled, so you miss its significance. (The young mother hopelessly tells her children they will be joining their father soon in heaven – which evokes thoughts of the Japanese soldiers who died in World War II.)
Perhaps most disappointing, the GOJIRA audio commentary mentions a reference to the atomic bombing of Nagasaki that does not actually occur in the film, at least in the print on this DVD. In the scene (which was deleted from the American version), a woman commuter laments the appearance of Gojira and – in the subtitles for some prints – adds, “I hope I didn’t survive Nagasaki for nothing.” Although both Ryfle and Godziszewski mention the reference (Ryfle even quotes it later, in the GODZILLA, KING OF THE MONSTERS commentary), it is not seen in the subtitles here. And truth be told, listening to the Japanese dialogue, I’m not sure I can hear the woman say Nagasaki, leaving me to wonder if the subtitles on earlier prints were a mistake. In any case, it is a glaring anamoly to hear the two experts discussing something is not actually visible to the viewer, and only someone who had seen older import tapes of the movie would know what they are talking about.
Despite these minor flaws, the new GOJIRA DVD is a genuin gem. Thanks to later sequels, which rapidly descended into juvenile, anthropomorphized antics, with Godzilla acting as the proctor of Earth against other monsters and/or alien invasions, Godzilla is not something we take seriously as film art. Yet the monster’s very first film appearance ranks as one of the classic sci-fi-fantasy-horror films, worthy of standing beside the original KING KONG in all his majesty. Hopefully, this DVD will help secure GOJIRA’s rightful place in the pantheon of movie monsters.

An elaborate miniature setting for Godzilla's raid on Tokyo

GODZILLA (Gojira, Toho Studios, 1954; a.k.a. GODZILLA, KING OF THE MONSTERS,1956). Directed by Ishiro Honda. Written by Ishiro Honda and Takeo Murata, from a story by Shigeru Kayama. Starring: Akira Takarada, Momoko Kochi, Akihiko Hirata, Takashi Shimura.
FOOTNOTE:

  • Alone among Godzilla films, the 1954 original was known for many decades – even in English-speaking circles – only by its Japanese title, GOJIRA. This usage made sense when the film had not been released under the title GODZILLA; it helped distinguish the uncut Japanese version from its Americanized off-shoot, GODZILLA, KING OF THE MONSTERS. However, since Rialto’s 2004 release used the English title GODZILLA, that is the usage adopted in this review. As a side note, no one seems to know precisely why or how Toho Studios decided to rename their most famous monster for export to the rest of the world.

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Godzilla Raids Again (1955) – Film & DVD Review

GODZILLA RAIDS AGAINReleased just six months after the first GODZILLA film (a.k.a. GOJIRA, 1954), this 1955 effort is a weakly plotted sequel that nonetheless retains much of the mood of the original. The basic problem is that the filmmakers seem to have had little idea what to do with the film except rehash what had come before, minus the melodrama and ethical dilemma that made the original so memorable – even when the monster was not on screen. Nevertheless, thanks to impressive special effects and a serious tone, GODZILLA RAIDS AGAIN (a.k.a. GODZILLA’S COUNTERATTACK and GIGANTIS THE FIRE MONSTER) is much better than the colorful but silly sequels churned out in the 1970s.
What passes for a story focuses on some characters working for a fishing company, who spot Godzilla and a new monster, Anguiras, fighting on an island where they make an emergency landing. The clashing titans head toward the coast of Japan where their battle destroys much of Osaka – including the fishing business – before Godzilla kills his opponent. The fishing company boss relocates his business headquarters to the Hokkaido branch in the north, but Godzilla heads in that direction, ultimately wandering onto a glacial island, where jet planes unleash their bombs, burying the beast under an avalanche of ice.
One might call this the “Life Goes On” Godzilla sequel: the lead characters’ connection with Godzilla is mostly a matter of circumstance, and the script has to struggle to keep them involved with the hunt for the beast. Most of the story is nearly plotless, wasting time on the personal lives of the protagonists, whose main concerns are finding a girlfriend, getting married, and keeping the fishing business afloat (so to speak). The result is some dull passages that make the audience grateful for the intrusion of Godzilla.


Neither director Oda nor composer Masaru Sato can equal the work of their counterparts, Ishiro Honda and Akira Ifukube, on the previous film. Fortunately, they do show some flashes of talent here and there, and GODZILLA RAIDS AGAIN is punctuated by brief scenes and images that make it seem momentarily better than it is overall. For instance, after the defeat of Godzilla, there is a wonderful final shot of the hero shedding a tear for a fallen friend who died in the effort – a surprisingly moving moment that contains more emotion than the entirety of the 1998 TriStar GODZILLA. There are also several scenes that deliberately evoke memories of World War II, grounding the fantastic tale in a believable sense of reality that makes it monster action feel genuinely disturbing.
The highlight of the film is the special effects by Eiji Tsuburaya. The battle between Godzilla and Anguiras avoids the anthropomorphic action that marred later efforts, emphasizing animal-like violence. But the real standout is the conclusion among the icy mountains of the isolated island where Godzilla meets his fate. The stark black-and-white imagery has an almost expressionistic look the recalls classic Universal horror films from the 1930s, and the effects works for the fighter planes is quite improved from similar footage in GODZILLA, creating a visually stunning demise for the King of the Monsters that ranks among the most impressive scenes of this kind ever captured on celluloid.
In the end, GODZILLA RAIDS AGAIN is a fairly typical sequel: not as good as the original, it reprises some familiar motifs and occasionally rises to a level that makes it stand on its own, if only for moments at a time. It is not a masterpiece that will win over skeptical non-fans, but enthusiasts for giant monster movies should find it appealing.


A leaner, meaner Godzilla clashes with Anguiras.
AMERICAN VERSIONIt took four years for GODZILLA RAIDS AGAIN to reach U.S. audiences. The American distributor originally wanted to scrap the Japanese live-action footage and use the special effects as stock footage for an otherwise all-new American film. A script was even written, entitled THE VOLCANO MONSTERS. Financial problems prevented this movie from being made. Instead, the U.S. producer, apparently thinking that a new monster would sell more tickets, renamed Godzilla “Gigantis” and retiled the film GIGANTIS, THE FIRE MONSTER.Unlike GODZILLA, KING OF THE MONSTERS (1956), which deleted much footage from the 1954 GODZILLA for American release, GIGANTIS, THE FIRE MONSTER retains most of the footage from GODZILLA RAIDS AGAIN. Instead, the Americanized version is padded out with stock footage. In some cases (the opening montage of rocket launches), the added footage is simply incongruous; in others (the badly done prehistoric footage), it is of a lamentably cheesy, almost Gumby-esque quality.As bad as the new footage is, even worse is the dubbing. Although the voice actors (which includes the KUNG FU’s Keye Luke and STAR TREK’s George Takei) are not bad, the script’s attempt to match the lip movement results in some ridiculous dialogue like “Banana Oil!” (a flapper era expression for “nonsense” that sounded dated even when the film was released). And for some reason, the lead character is given a non-stop voice over narration that runs virtually throughout the film, often telling audiences what they can see for themselves on the screen.Also, much of the original score is replaced with nearly wall-to-wall stock music cues, often mismatched. The final insult is that the sound effects for the roar of the two monsters are used interchangeably.Under the circumstances, it is understandable that GIGANTIS, THE FIRE MONSTER has earned a reputation as a cheesy monster movie. Viewers who have only seen the American version should take the opportunity to watch the Japanese original: it may not be a great movie, but it is clearly superior to the bastardized version released in the U.S.

TRIVIA

This is the only film in which Godzilla’s dorsal fins are not shown glowing when he shoots his radioactive breath.The Godzilla suit in GODZILLA RAIDS AGAIN is somewhat thinner than in the 1954 GODZILLA, with more pronounced shoulders and a head that looks too wide when seen straight on. There is also a hand-puppet for close-ups of the head, which has a noticeably bucktooth look.This is the first film in which Godzilla squares off against another monster for a duel to the death, establishing a tradition that the series would continue for decades later.The spectacle of the two monsters charging and clawing at each other is occasionally enhanced by an accident of filming: one of the special effects cameras was set at slow speed; consequently, the footage looks fast when played back at normal speed. (This is the exact opposite of the usual process, which used slow-motion to give the rubber-suited actors a better sense of the inertia that comes with enormous size.) Although the fast-motion effect is not really convincing, it does make the huge monsters seem more aggressive and angry in their battle.


This posed publicity shot features the Godzilla suit from the previous
film and the bizarre sight of Anguiras with a flapping shell.

DVD DETAILSThe Toho Master Collection DVD (ASIN: B000MV8AJU), released in the U.S. by Classic Media, comes in a snazzy, silvery slipcase that somewhat resembles a small book, with poster art on the front, a few small photos on the back, and a nice shot of Anguiras roaring on the inside. The disc includes both the original Japanese version and the American version of the film, along with a handful of interesting bonus features: audio commentary, a featurette on suit acting, and a gallery of posters.
Both versions are presented in Dolby Digital with full screen picture, divided into twelve chapters, accessed from identical looking menus, made up of poster images from the film. The prints are in reasonably good shape, with clear picture that does justice to the atmospheric black-and-white photography; however, the American version bears some telltale signs of wear and tear: occasional scratches and speckling. The Japanese print is overall superior – although the contrast is greater, creating darker areas of the screen that sometimes obscure the action. For example, the memorable close-up of Godzilla’s eyes flicking back and forth – as he hears the soldiers trying to set a flaming blockade to trap him – is too dark to register clearly, whereas it is perfectly visible in the American print. The American version has a video-generated main title that restores “Godzilla Raids Again” in place of “Gigantis, the Fire Monster” – which makes little sense, since the dubbing still calls the monster “Gigantis.”
The poster slide show consists of seven images accompanied by the film’s main title music.
The “Art of Suit Acting” featurette consists of informative narration, provided by kaiju expert Ed Godziszewski, illustrated by numerous rare still photographs from various Japanese giant monster movies.
This short mini-documentary is filled with interesting tidbits, but it is mostly of interest to hard-core fans; more general viewers will find themselves loosing track of the various names of the numerous actors who donned rubber suits to appear as Godzilla and his many opponents.
The highlight of the bonus features is the audio commentary, which is available with the American version of the film. The majority is provided by Steve Ryfle, author of JAPAN’S FAVORITE MON-STAR. Even if you think you know everything about these films, you might find yourself learning a little. Ryfle gives the run-down on the changes made when bringing GODZILLA RAIDS AGAIN to the U.S. He also drags in other friends and experts with interesting stories to tell. Stuart Galbraith IV offers some recollections of composer Sato. Bob Burns relates the time he was working at an American special effects house and accidentally stumbled upon the Godzilla and Anguiras suits, which had been shipped to the U.S. for additional shooting on the aborted VOLCANO MONSTERS project. Ryfle is completely aware of GODZILLA RAIDS AGAIN’s shortcomings as a sequel (one can easily relate to his irritation when the film stops the action to dwell on some irrelevant “character development” scenes that add little to the main story), but he also deftly notes the many evocative moments that punctuate the film, raising it a level above what it could have been and making it impossible to dismiss as a mere rehash.
For decades, GODZILLA RAIDS AGAIN was officially available in the U.S. only in its altered form, which fell far short of doing justice to the original and fans to seek out bootleg VHS tapes. Thanks to this new DVD, at last GODZILLA RAIDS AGAIN is easily available in its original form. Despite the film’s imperfections, this DVD is a must-have for any self-respecting Japanese giant monster movie fan.
GODZILLA RAIDS AGAIN (a.k.a. “Gojira no gyakushu” [“Godzilla’s Counter Attack”], Toho, 1955; originally released in the U.S. as GIGANTIS THE FIRE MONSTER, 1959). Directed by Motoyoshi Oda. Written by Shigeaki Hidaka, Takeo Murata, story by Shigeru Kayama. Cast: Hiroshi Koizumi, Setsuko Wakayama, Minor Chiaki, Takashi Shimura, Masao Shimizu, Seijiro Onda, Sonasuke Sawamura, Yoshi Tsuchiya, Mayuri Mokusho.
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