by lhb412 » Wed Jan 01, 2014 3:56 pm
Just watched this film for the first time in... probably a decade.
I figured I had to have a copy of the film to complete my collection - especially with Legendary Godzilla seemingly giving the concept of American Godzilla films legitimately (by actually having Godzilla in them).
Ironically, I feel this film has the Godzilla most restrained by special effects: GINO is always crouching uncomfortably into the frame, always hesitantly interacting with anything around him (much of which are rather nice model buildings), and we never really get a sense that he weighs as much as he's supposed to or takes up as much space as he's supposed to. In the end it makes for a rather insubstantial monster.
The story is pretty boilerplate monster-on-the-loose stuff, but it lacks any sense of urgency or scale required to make it fulfilling. The buildup to the monster's appearance is pretty good, but once we roost in NYC the movie stops and starts. We never feel a sense of fear or tension that Godzilla could show up at any moment, only a sense of relief that the many many many comic relief moments involving the human cast will cease temporarily (but they manage to work them into the monster scenes, too). This team's previous film, ID4, managed to tie in the apocalyptic disaster with the characters much better. Here they almost seem like they're from different films: are we really invested in how this whole Godzilla thing ties into Audrey becoming a reporter or Nick forgiving Audrey or that military guy's constant stuttering?
In the end, the strange thing about this film is all the production stuff around it: the idea that the old Godzilla films were cheesy junk and that now Hollywood and $100+ in computer special effects was gonna turn out the serious, realistic monster than could only be possible in modern times... but the film itself is neither serious or realistic. It's at least 70% goofy, but with groan worthy humor and lacking the sorts of goofy things people expect and like in Godzilla movies.