by the_candidate » Tue Jan 12, 2010 6:50 pm
The miniatures in GMK are indeed fantastic, but there are so few of them. The Bonin Island miniatures look good, as well as the house that the jet crashes into. Kaneko didn't take full advantage of the Yokohama set, however. The buildings are great but not enough of them get destroyed; at times it looks as if the monsters are walking on pre-determined paths "between" the buildings; the most glaring example of this is when Ghidorah arrives and "rolls" towards Godzilla and hits nothing. In fact, most of the Yokohama battle takes place in the harbor.
What brings the Millennium Series down is the CGI. During the 90s, Toho really wanted to use CGI for their monsters, but it just didn't look good. They tried animating Biollante with computers, but the effect was very poor and the scene was deleted (it can be seen on youtube, however). Of course, CGI was still being perfected throughout the early to mid 90s, so they probably couldn't have used much of it anyway. Once 1999 hit, however, CGI was a staple of sci-fi films in both Japan and the US, for better or for worse. Unfortunately, Toho never utilized CGI properly. The monsters that are rendered with computers look horrible; the birth sequences of Ghidorah and Mothra in GMK stand out the most, but the swimming Godzilla in G2K and quite a few effects in GFW are bad as well.
Even five years after GFW, its computer effects look downright embarassing. The same goes for all the Millennium films, where the CGI is on par with what Asylum makes. The scene with Tachibana and the Satsuma sub inside Godzilla in GMK is just painful to watch. During the 2000s, Toho was obviously trying to keep up with Hollywood's CGI, but they never had the budget to pull it off. In addition, Toho began outsourcing their practical effects work, which is why a lot of the monsters look very stiff and rubbery. If you compare the Millennium Godzilla suits to the Heisei ones, the Heisei ones have a certain anatomical look to them. Godzilla has both feline and reptilian qualities. The Millennium Godzillas just have the standard "giant monster" look. It doesn't look good on camera.
One other huge advantage to the 90s films was the use of animatronics. The Millennium films, aside from GMK, did not utilize animatronic Godzilla heads. Godzilla barely does any emoting in the Millennium films; he walks around, stiff as a board, and just stares. The Heisei films, meanwile, had great-looking animatronic Godzilla heads that could blink, snarl, rotate, growl, and sneer. Close-up shots of Godzilla firing his heat ray looked excellent, and his movements were very life-like. Aside from GMK, the Millennium films had nothing like this, and it's baffling why Toho didn't invest in more animatronics.