Maybe. I thought Godzilla was the star, though. Not overly interested in the human characters, but will keep an open mind. But really, please stay away from a love story, a buddy story, or anything like that. I don't care.If Gareth Edwards has characters drive the film like he did in his excellent indie flick "Monsters" rather than CGI mayhem, this will be worth seeing, G-fan or not.
Bryan Cranston said a big reason he signed on for this was his read of the script and the focus on the human characters. Great sign.
Leaks from a toy fair said that the toy Godzilla had Atomic Breath.jwb said:Maybe. I thought Godzilla was the star, though. Not overly interested in the human characters, but will keep an open mind. But really, please stay away from a love story, a buddy story, or anything like that. I don't care.pats3in4 said:If Gareth Edwards has characters drive the film like he did in his excellent indie flick "Monsters" rather than CGI mayhem, this will be worth seeing, G-fan or not.
Bryan Cranston said a big reason he signed on for this was his read of the script and the focus on the human characters. Great sign.
Really hope they go back to the radioactive breath.
Blue meth vs. blue breathHeisenberg vs Godzilla
Can't wait!!
This is one of my favorite movies, and I don't mean just Godzilla movies. This is one of the best unintentionally funny movies from that era, before Toho simply threw in the towel on the bulk of their later entries. Nick Adams and his "You rats! You dirty stinkin' rats! What did you do to her?!?" kills me every time. Taking Godzilla and Rodan to Planet X in big bubbles...what the? The aliens referring to themselves as "The controller of Planet X" and such...yeah, sure you also call your own world "Planet X". Yet despite all the fromage, Toho tried hard and also put a lot of money into this one. The Planet X exterior with Jupiter hovering over the monster battle was well done for the '60s. The special effects with the trucks emitting the a-cycle beam to disrupt the aliens' control over the monsters was also good for the time. Akira Ifukube's score is one of his best for all of the Godzilla movies he did. Even the overall story was entertaining, despite being full of holes.badmojo1006 said:Netflix has added 7 classic Godzilla movies this month.
I watched Godzilla vs. Monster Zero last night. I remember going and seeing this in the theater for my 10th birthday. Pure Cheese!
I had forgot about Godzilla dancing the Irish Jig. I wasThis is one of my favorite movies, and I don't mean just Godzilla movies. This is one of the best unintentionally funny movies from that era, before Toho simply threw in the towel on the bulk of their later entries. Nick Adams and his "You rats! You dirty stinkin' rats! What did you do to her?!?" kills me every time. Taking Godzilla and Rodan to Planet X in big bubbles...what the? The aliens referring to themselves as "The controller of Planet X" and such...yeah, sure you also call your own world "Planet X". Yet despite all the fromage, Toho tried hard and also put a lot of money into this one. The Planet X exterior with Jupiter hovering over the monster battle was well done for the '60s. The special effects with the trucks emitting the a-cycle beam to disrupt the aliens' control over the monsters was also good for the time. Akira Ifukube's score is one of his best for all of the Godzilla movies he did. Even the overall story was entertaining, despite being full of holes.badmojo1006 said:Netflix has added 7 classic Godzilla movies this month.
I watched Godzilla vs. Monster Zero last night. I remember going and seeing this in the theater for my 10th birthday. Pure Cheese!
This is '60s B-movie making at its best.
This movie and Nick Adams' performance even merited a cartoon parody.I had forgot about Godzilla dancing the Irish Jig. I wasThis is one of my favorite movies, and I don't mean just Godzilla movies. This is one of the best unintentionally funny movies from that era, before Toho simply threw in the towel on the bulk of their later entries. Nick Adams and his "You rats! You dirty stinkin' rats! What did you do to her?!?" kills me every time. Taking Godzilla and Rodan to Planet X in big bubbles...what the? The aliens referring to themselves as "The controller of Planet X" and such...yeah, sure you also call your own world "Planet X". Yet despite all the fromage, Toho tried hard and also put a lot of money into this one. The Planet X exterior with Jupiter hovering over the monster battle was well done for the '60s. The special effects with the trucks emitting the a-cycle beam to disrupt the aliens' control over the monsters was also good for the time. Akira Ifukube's score is one of his best for all of the Godzilla movies he did. Even the overall story was entertaining, despite being full of holes.badmojo1006 said:Netflix has added 7 classic Godzilla movies this month.
I watched Godzilla vs. Monster Zero last night. I remember going and seeing this in the theater for my 10th birthday. Pure Cheese!
This is '60s B-movie making at its best.
Yes, Nick Adams was classic
Not officially. Toho didn't license the rights to other monsters.So rodan is in this?
No, he held out for off the top, back-end points at gross and an fairly heavy piece of the merch.So rodan is in this?
ok but a pterodactyl is clearly in the previews. Doesnt matter what name the monster has.Not officially. Toho didn't license the rights to other monsters.So rodan is in this?
That's what happens when you get too big for your britches. They just call some other schmozilla.ok but a pterodactyl is clearly in the previews. Doesnt matter what name the monster has.Not officially. Toho didn't license the rights to other monsters.So rodan is in this?
Like, say...Blue Oyster Cult?That's what happens when you get too big for your britches. They just call some other schmozilla.ok but a pterodactyl is clearly in the previews. Doesnt matter what name the monster has.Not officially. Toho didn't license the rights to other monsters.So rodan is in this?
The performance won't be as nuanced but they will save millions and most won't even notice.
Ask any big rock group that replaced their drummer and went on.
It was interesting interview with Edwards where he said the very first Godzilla movie out of Japan was a serious flick and not the campy movies everyone knows and loves. And he wanted to get back to that. The original was technically about Hiroshima and Nagasaki nuclear attacks, but because the filmmakers we're not allowed to tell the true nuclear bomb stories, they came up with Japanese cities being destroyed by Godzilla and the radiation aftermath.Looking forward to this. Seems like they are trying to make this into a serious movie. But come on, its Godzilla.
The original Japanese version, "Gojira", is a strong allegory to the nuclear attacks in WWII as well as a Japanese fishing boat doused with radiation from an atomic test in the Pacific in the early 1950s. When the movie was recut for American audiences (with Raymond Burr) and retitled, "Godzilla, King of the Monsters", a lot of that was removed or softened. A few years back "Gojira" was released on DVD in the USA with English subtitles. If you want to see what Edwards is trying to revisit with his remake, go rent that. It is a lot darker than the Americanized Burr version.Billy Bats said:It was interesting interview with Edwards where he said the very first Godzilla movie out of Japan was a serious flick and not the campy movies everyone knows and loves. And he wanted to get back to that. The original was technically about Hiroshima and Nagasaki nuclear attacks, but because the filmmakers we're not allowed to tell the true nuclear bomb stories, they came up with Japanese cities being destroyed by Godzilla and the radiation aftermath.Looking forward to this. Seems like they are trying to make this into a serious movie. But come on, its Godzilla.
Never heard that backstory on the original movie before and found in interesting, thanks for the added detail.The original Japanese version, "Gojira", is a strong allegory to the nuclear attacks in WWII as well as a Japanese fishing boat doused with radiation from an atomic test in the Pacific in the early 1950s. When the movie was recut for American audiences (with Raymond Burr) and retitled, "Godzilla, King of the Monsters", a lot of that was removed or softened. A few years back "Gojira" was released on DVD in the USA with English subtitles. If you want to see what Edwards is trying to revisit with his remake, go rent that. It is a lot darker than the Americanized Burr version.Billy Bats said:It was interesting interview with Edwards where he said the very first Godzilla movie out of Japan was a serious flick and not the campy movies everyone knows and loves. And he wanted to get back to that. The original was technically about Hiroshima and Nagasaki nuclear attacks, but because the filmmakers we're not allowed to tell the true nuclear bomb stories, they came up with Japanese cities being destroyed by Godzilla and the radiation aftermath.Looking forward to this. Seems like they are trying to make this into a serious movie. But come on, its Godzilla.
Godzilla was more an obvious statement against nuclear testing and against using the bomb again. His breath is radiation not fire. The Japanese version is far superior in character development, storyline, and message. The US version was a dumbed down monster movie. Rent Gojira or see it on Netflix.The original Japanese version, "Gojira", is a strong allegory to the nuclear attacks in WWII as well as a Japanese fishing boat doused with radiation from an atomic test in the Pacific in the early 1950s. When the movie was recut for American audiences (with Raymond Burr) and retitled, "Godzilla, King of the Monsters", a lot of that was removed or softened. A few years back "Gojira" was released on DVD in the USA with English subtitles. If you want to see what Edwards is trying to revisit with his remake, go rent that. It is a lot darker than the Americanized Burr version.It was interesting interview with Edwards where he said the very first Godzilla movie out of Japan was a serious flick and not the campy movies everyone knows and loves. And he wanted to get back to that. The original was technically about Hiroshima and Nagasaki nuclear attacks, but because the filmmakers we're not allowed to tell the true nuclear bomb stories, they came up with Japanese cities being destroyed by Godzilla and the radiation aftermath.Looking forward to this. Seems like they are trying to make this into a serious movie. But come on, its Godzilla.
It was a serious commentary on the environment and the nuclear attacks on Japan from the beginning.Looking forward to this. Seems like they are trying to make this into a serious movie. But come on, its Godzilla.