by ryuuseipro » Thu Jul 31, 2003 11:16 pm
I agree, this movie rules! It's got everything that ever appealed to me as a kid: Giant monsters (a good-guy monster and two bad-guy monsters), an Ultraman/Shogun Warrior-style robot, a Greek-like evil empire (although they weren't technically evil to begin with), a kid character and other stuff! It was not only the first Godzilla movie I ever saw, but also the first movie I saw in theaters!
The Godzilla featured in this movie (also in Meteor Man Zone and the subsequent two Godzilla films) is not only one of my favorite designs, but also the cutest (come on, you know it is)! As a dog lover, I thought it looked like a puppy monster as if done by Gou Nagai. I nickname it "Snoopy-Goji!" (And speaking of Snoopy, anyone notice that little Rokurou "Roku-chan" Ibuki had Snoopy on his sweater?)
If it weren't for Jet Jaguar, I wouldn't get into Japanese superheroes (I think the Shogun Warriors toys helped also, as the first anime series I ever saw was Brave Raideen)!
Megalon and Gigan were very cool monsters, too! Whereas most of the past monsters in the series were old-fashioned, Toho began to keep up with the cooler fantasy monsters featured in Eiji Tsuburaya's popular Ultra-Series! In each film, Toho ups the ante for each challenge Godzilla takes.
The music by Riichirou Manabe is just as good as his music for Godzilla Vs. Hedorah, but this time, his Godzilla theme music isn't as droopy as the version in said film! His avant-garde pieces for Seatopia were pretty eerie! I liked much of the action music (though the banjo music in one scene was kinda' silly). But I still treasure the "With Godzilla and Jet Jaguar, Punch-Punch-Punch" theme sung by my favorite Japanese pop singer Masato Shimon! I was also amused by the "Beat Megalon" theme he sang on the film's soundtrack (an instrumental piece from the song can be heard in the opening credits music).
And while I hear that the human scenes were shot in a week or two, the SPFX scenes were done in 6 months (!), the longest production time for a Godzilla film! For a fantasy/action monster film, SPFX Director Teruyoshi Nakano did a very good job! I was very happy to have met him at AFFE!
Godzilla Vs. Megalon is still a classic to me!
-John Cassidy
Richmond, VA
http://ryuuseipro.livejournal.com/
"The monster a child knows best and is most concerned with [is] the monster he feels or fears himself to be." -Bruno Bettelheim