A massive storm blows through an island.
The villagers are fast asleep, except one family of three. Something is shaking
the house, but it’s not the wind. Finally, in a dead panic, the younger brother
bolts outside to confront the invader, with the others remaining in the home,
doomed to their fate, as the house crumbles around them. An ancient roar rips
through the air, as a bipedal behemoth rumbles through the village. The year is
1954, and Japanese audiences have just met Godzilla.
By far, Godzilla
(1954) is the best and one of the most influential of all Science Fiction
films. Even if you’re not into the big kiddie camp of the Japanese monster
movies, this one is a must see! It follows the resurrection of a dinosaur,
reawakened by radioactive weapons testing. Suspense fills your mind as a dark
and foreboding animal raids through a village in the dead of the night. This is
not a misunderstood creature, like the 1998’s Godzilla. This animal has
purposely vaporized ships, killing its crew members, for no reason in
particular. Sure, it sounds cliché in retrospective, but remember this is still
the early 50’s. The film follows Godzilla as he rips through 300,000 volts of
electrical wire, wipes out a tank division, and purposely pulls down a tower
full of reporters, who annoy him with flash photography. At one point during
the raid on Tokyo, he even breathes his trademark radioactive fire on the
highway in front of him for no apparent reason. Clearly, this creature is
looking for total destruction of Japan, as vengeance for waking him. No
creature sympathy here.
The sadness comes into play in the second half of
the film, after Godzilla destroys Tokyo. The city’s survivors are being
corralled into field hospitals. As the camera pans over the miserable scene,
you hear a baby crying somewhere in the background, reminding viewers that even
the innocence of children were destroyed, along with homes and lives.
Before you start to say how silly and unrealistic a
guy in a rubber suit looks on screen, I have to say in advance that the
director actually made Godzilla look better in a suit than in stop motion, for
the suit’s movements are slow and lumber some, as if he were actually a
thousand tons.Another cool trick is that most monster scenes are shot with a
low camera angle, so the audience feels like it’s looking up at something tall
and massive, and not just a six foot tall guy in a suit The pitch-black night
sky also casts a little darkness on the suit, hiding some of the less
convincing prosthetics. One noteworthy feature is that this Godzilla design
sports a pair of blank, crazed-looking eyes that stare down wildly at the
fleeing people. It also has a pair of fangs, jutting out from his top jaws,
like a viper. Its roar also has a much deeper pitch than the later models,
giving it the sense of something powerful and angry. The sound of Godzilla’s
roar was conceived by rubbing a pair of resin gloves across a bass violin, then
slowing down the sound when the recording was played.
The big G is the grand-daddy of the many giant-monster-destroys-city genre, and its influence can still be felt, including in the upcoming Pacific Rim. This dark intro to the series is still the best, and highly recommended. Four out of Four.
(Editor's note: Did you know the director of this film, Ishiro Honda, also directed The Mysterians, as well as many other movies in this category. See the review here.)
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