by Sam » Tue Aug 30, 2005 7:29 am
This morning at 9.00AM, BBC Breakfast News held a special report on the UK screenings of the original Godzilla, starting in October. The report is avaliable by .
Read the transcript below:
(Report by David Sillito, BBC News)
Sillito: (Reporter-BBC News): Godzilla in 1954 was a movie sensation. And over the years the dinosaur from the deep has appeared in more than two dozen films, and acquired an army of fans who will buy anything featuring this monster with radioactive breath, and a grudge against nuclear testing and Tokyo city planners. But the original Japanese Godzilla film has never been shown in British cinemas. Hollywood added American characters and cut out the reason why Godzilla had gone on the rampage: American nuclear testing.
David Sin (British Film Institute): The subtext, especially around nuclear testing in the South Pacific, was probably seen as a subject that the American studios and their perception of the American audiences would find too hard to handle.
Sillto: The uncut "Godzilla" represents deep fears of Japan in the 50s, both of natural disasters, and the atom bomb; this was less than ten years after the bomb was dropped on Hiroshima, and came at a time of high anxiety about tests of the H-bomb in the South Pacific. But there's another reason for releasing the film - restoring Godzilla's reputation.
Because over the years the Godzilla movies became ever more outlandish. "Godzilla" was followed by "Godzilla Counterattacks", and then there was "King Kong vs. Godzilla", "Son of Godzilla", "Godzilla vs. Space Godzilla"!
At London's Forbidden Planet, there are cuddly Godzillas and model Godzillas, and a sense that outside his core fanbase, he's a bit of a joke!
Ian Edwards (Forbidden Planet): It's probably that it's a little bit corny, a little bit pokey, that it's a man in a rubber suit destroying a model of Tokyo.
Sillito: But the British Film Institute feels that the original film is not only interesting,
David Sin (British Film Institute): It's a terrific movie, it's a cult movie, because it works on different levels, it appeals to a wide range of audiences because of those common mythologies around monsters, anxieties about the nuclear age. I think that above all it's an incredibly well-made movie.
Sillito: So 50 years on, an attempt to rescue Godzilla's reputation, both as a screen legend and anti-nuclear campaigner. David Sillito, BBC News.
(From )