by Benjamin Haines » Wed Feb 28, 2024 12:56 am
I do want to vouch for Monsters Are Attacking Tokyo and Japan's Favorite Mon-Star too. Even though they're both from 1998 and they don't cover anything past the Heisei Series or G'98, their coverage of everything up to then is comprehensive. Stuart Galbraith IV and Steve Ryfle traveled to Japan together in 1994 and 1996 to conduct a ton of interviews with people who worked in this genre.
Monsters Are Attacking Tokyo is 191 pages long and all of the text from page 43 through page 119 is comprised entirely of interview quotes. Rather than presenting each interview individually in standard Q&A format, Galbraith arranged the quotes to paint a vivid picture of working in the Japanese film industry's Golden Age and the later transition to television. Some of the more recognizable interviewees are actors Akira Takarada, Kenji Sahara, Kumi Mizuno, Akira Kubo, Yu Fujiki, Momoko Kochi, Yoshio Tsuchiya, Mie Hama, Robert Dunham, Yuriko Hoshi, Rhodes Reason, Yosuke Natsuki and Sonny Chiba; directors Akira Kurosawa, Ishiro Honda (interviewed by James Bailey for The Tokyo Journal), Jun Fukuda, Noriaki Yuasa, Kinji Fukasaku and Shue Matsubayashi; and composers Akira Ifukube and Masaru Sato.
Take a look at the book's table of contents:
https://i.imgur.com/SL52p0i.jpg
The opening chapters up to page 43 are informative and entertaining essays about the history of the genre. The chapters from page 120 to the end are less unique nowadays in the age of the internet, particularly the filmography and the film chart, but seriously, all of those interview chapters from page 43 through page 119 are priceless. It's firsthand information straight from the people who made these films and shows, many of whom have sadly passed on in the time since this book was published.
Here's just a sample of how the various interview quotes are arranged to tell the broader story:
https://i.imgur.com/mu0gXUC.jpg
And here's the table of contents for Japan's Favorite Mon-Star:
https://i.imgur.com/OGyGMM9.jpg
https://i.imgur.com/1q9hU2s.jpg
The supplemental sections devoted to personnel files, interviews, unmade projects and other things are all arranged chronologically among the chapters devoted to each movie, which are packed with information. The chapter on G'84, for instance, not only covers the making of the movie but the years leading up to it, including Tomoyuki Tanaka's earlier attempts to revive Godzilla and an in-depth exploration of the unmade Godzilla: King of the Monsters in 3-D that was written by Fred Dekker and was to have been directed by Steve Miner as the first American-produced Godzilla film for a 1983 release. Ryfle interviewed Dekker, Miner and concept artist William Stout for this book and it even has a detailed synopsis of Dekker's script.
Here's a sample from that chapter:
https://i.imgur.com/uxYkuPR.jpg
Ryfle interviewed a lot of other people too, including dub voice actors Peter Fernandez and William Ross, screenwriters Terry Rossio & Ted Elliott for the chapter on G'98, and Joseph Barbera for the section on Hanna-Barbera's animated Godzilla series.
Back in 2019, I was able to get a used copy of Japan's Favorite Mon-Star for $27.12 including shipping, and a used copy of Monsters Are Attacking Tokyo for $13.94 including shipping. There are still several copies of each book with similar prices listed on both eBay and Amazon but there are also several copies listed with much higher prices. There's no telling when the lower-priced listings will disappear and the higher prices will become the norm but these books will inevitably become rarer as time goes on.