I originally had tickets to see this today, but it seems as though word reached UK distributors about just how well this is doing in the US, because when I checked again last week I saw it was playing at an even more local cinema. So I was able to see it on Friday instead, and wow. Yeah. Even going in *knowing* it was going to be amazing still didn't prepare me for actually seeing it for myself.
First off, I've got to say that I absolutely love the fact that even after 70 years, we can still get Godzilla movies that aren't just good, they're spectacular! Some series end, some fade away, but just like Godzilla himself at the end of this and other movies, this is a series that just can't be killed, and indeed, can come back stronger than ever. And I LOVE that!
But yeah, Minus One was incredible. Stunning visuals, great story, characters I really cared about, tons of emotion, incredible action, and a Godzilla that's both simultaneously classic and also doing things we've never seen Godzilla do before. I'm not sure there's much they could have done better.
From the opening scene I was absolutely hooked. That pre-mutation Godzilla was just straight-up *brutal* in a way we've never seen before, and it was amazing. From there on out I was digging everything about it. Like Dai said, I absolutely loved every time Godzilla appeared, but at the same time, after that opening scene and knowing what he was going to be capable of, I almost dreaded his appearance because I'd actually gotten attached enough to the characters that I knew they were all going to be in serious danger when he showed up. And it definitely made me cry. I realised pretty early on that I'd not brought enough tissues for what I was in for!
Those scenes of Godzilla themselves also reminded me of Gamera 3, specifically the aerial battle, in the way that you could see Yamazaki utilising *just enough* SFX as he was able to on this budget (which was extremely impressive, but obviously not as high as a typical Hollywood blockbuster's would be) to satisfying the audience and give them what they wanted to see without being forced to skip any of the good stuff. It was all really well done.
The atomic breath attack on Ginza was jaw-dropping. Probably the most powerful and destructive thing we've ever seen Godzilla do, period, made even more dramatic by the fact that we can see civilians looking on in awe and trying to run from what's coming. And like Benjamin said, I loved how, even though we got some great new twists on things like the atomic breath and how it comes about, this is the most classic-looking Godzilla we've gotten in the Reiwa era to date. Which that in and of itself makes it stand out. And I loved how it still retained so much of the "main in a suit" look to it, from standing completely upright to stomping along one foot at a time at the end there especially. It's just awesome in every respect.
The music was fantastic too, and really unscored the bleak and somber nature of the post-war setting, but also just how dread-inducing Godzilla's appearances were. And man did they ever pick the perfect times to hit us with the Ifukube classics! Even though we'd seen Godzilla being a destructive powerhouse in previous scenes, his first full, proper appearance in the middle of Ginza synced to his theme?! So good! Not to mention how ridiculously hype it was when they go all-in on the plan at the end and the ships move out. Just absolutely perfect.
And of course, characters I actually cared about, which made everything that happened when Godzilla was around that much more gut-wrenching or tense. This really was like a post-war period drama that happened to have amazing monster action in it. I definitely got teary-eyed at multiple scenes, and not just onces where characters died (or appeared to die). You could take Godzilla out and still probably get a very compelling drama out of this group of people. But thankfully we got Godzilla in there too!
The crazy plan to deal with Godzilla was great as well. It felt very (appropriately) Showa-ish, and very Honda-ish with its group of ordinary people banding together to make it work. I actually loved that, after so much death and chaos throughout the film, they actually managed to stop Godzilla without anyone else dying......is what I thought until I remembered the decoy team got decimated.

Well, nobody else died *after* that point, anyway!

And they made it so clear that Koichi was going to sacrifice himself to stop Godzilla that I guess I should have seen the bait and switch coming earlier, but I'm glad I didn't. I twigged right before he flew the plane into Godzilla's mouth that he was going to eject (Doc's earlier speech about how shameful it was that Japan sent their pilots out without ejection seats and told them to sacrifice themselves immediately sprang to mind), but that was the perfect moment to realise that. And even Noriko survived! Again, after all the death that permeated the movie beforehand, I loved that we got a happy ending. That moment when Godzilla rose up and was about to destroy the ships?! That was the best "oh no....." moment I've had in a movie in a long time.
You could definitely feel the GMK influence here in a few ways, the ending perhaps being the most obvious in terms of it taking a main character piloting a vehicle into Godzilla to destroy them from the inside, as its atomic breath then breaks it apart only for the final shot of the film to be a piece of it regenerating to the classic theme. But Minus One did so much else different and new that I'm more than happy with it taking a few direct cues from other Godzilla films.
I'd say if there was one, frankly minor criticism I had it would funnily enough be the same as I had with Shin, in that after Godzilla decimates Tokyo at the midway point it does feel as though the pacing starts to lag just a little bit. Not enough that I thought it was a problem, but enough that it did enter my mind as I was watching it.
Also not so much a criticism, but I *was* a little surprised that there wasn't as much emphasis on the wrongs Japan had wrought during the war as I thought there'd be, especially with that "this monster.....will never forgive us" line from the trailer implying as much, and being curiously absent in the finished film (at least in the UK version. Was it in the US version and we got different subs?). Like lhb412 said, that aspect was presented in a bit more of a palatable way than I expected going in, but at the same time they still directly acknowledged Imperial Japan's "hey guys, go out and die for us!" mentality more than once, if not so much the impact they had on others (like GMK did). But again, it wasn't something that suddenly made me dislike the film itself.
Oh, and I've got to say, after being a Godzilla fan of the better part of 40 years now, it was an absolute joy to finally see an actual, Toho-made Godzilla movie on the big screen. When that Toho logo appeared at the beginning I had such a big smile on my face!
So yeah, Godzilla Minus One is incredible. One of the best Godzilla movies ever made, for sure. Spectacular. And if Takashi Yamazaki has said he wants to do another one, then Toho needs to sign him up right now. Not just because he's put the word out that he wants to make a Star Wars movie and could get poached at any time, but also because I'd honestly feel sorry for anyone else they might get to make the *next* Japanese Godzilla movie after the one-two combo of Shin and now this!
