by Benjamin Haines » Sun Aug 23, 2015 5:24 pm
This is the toughest call yet for me. These are two of my favorite Godzilla films and I rank them very closely to each other. I love how, despite both movies being directed by Jun Fukuda, scored by Masaru Sato, and set almost entirely on Pacific islands, they're really nothing alike. They're two wildly diverse stories with different assortments of character types, plot beats that don't even come close to paralleling each other, and seemingly two different target demographics (young adults vs. families). Props to the filmmakers for not rehashing the same movie over again in 1967.
I've got to go with Godzilla vs. The Sea Monster on this one. Nothing against Son of Godzilla at all; I just feel like Sea Monster is a little more ambitious and inventive. I find the way the film utilizes Mothra and Infant Island to be very inspired. Even though Mothra doesn't wake up until well into the third act, her presence is vital to moving the story forward and her brief encounter with Godzilla at the end is just fascinating to watch. You can tell he recognizes her and that he wants to fight, and that she just wants him to calm down and leave her alone so she can take care of the people she came to save. Godzilla's body language when Mothra grabs the net and leaves him there is one of those great kaiju character moments that the Showa Series has in droves. In any other context, featuring a fleeting kaiju encounter like that as the last 'monster battle' of a movie could have easily amounted to an anticlimax. Here, though, it works masterfully as a buffer between all of the action that makes up the third act (the Red Bamboo getting killed, Godzilla defeating Ebirah, our heroes getting away from the base) and Godzilla's last-minute escape from the island before the whole thing blows to smithereens, placing the film's climax and denouement squarely in that final scene.
Although I'm voting for Sea Monster, I want to say that I think both of these are fantastic and underrated Godzilla movies. Jun Fukuda brought such an invigorating spirit to these back-to-back island adventures. His contribution to the series was an integral part of what made the 1960s Godzilla's heyday.
