by Moonlight SY-3 » Fri Jul 29, 2016 11:10 am
Just walked in the door from seeing this.
Disclaimer before I start: I generally like everything. G98, KK76, JJ Trek, I love it all. So there's that.
But man-O-man, I thought this movie was FANTASTIC! I won't go through the plot point by point, since that's already been done, but wow...so different, and so familiar all at the same time. I'll predict that'll mean half the fandom will say "that ain't Godzilla!" and half will say "oh no, that again?" Whatever, it all worked for me.
The good/cool:
The main G design was excellent on the big screen. I wasn't a big fan of it up to now, but man, it works...and yes, it is pretty stiff, and very slow...JUST AS I LIKE IT! You really, really, REALLY get a feeling of immensity with this G. Not disappointed at all, and I was really prepared to be.
The initial "Proto-G" was very creepy, with quick, squirrelly movements, and of course, those wild fish eyes. Then he stood up and evolved a bit, and that was equally creepy. Very cool, I thought. Definitely not a tadpole. More like an armless lizard, with a fat weird neck, large hind legs, and a long tail.
They used ALL the G roars in this movie. All of 'em. And they all worked. I had posted before that I hoped they weren't going to use that AM radio quality Showa roar here, but they did a few times, and surprisingly it worked in the theater. Must have switched to FM. But yeah, every single Toho Godzilla roar ever is put to good use. Happy! The only down side to that is we don't get any kind of new roar.
All (or at least most) of the sound effects are classic Toho. Explosions, crumbling buildings, tail hitting the ground, tanks firing, missiles firing, all are straight from the classic Toho sound effects library. So you feel at home.
Same with the music. The Ifukube tracks used in the movie were the actual original recordings (as far as I could tell), not simply new music "inspired" by Ifukube's work. All straight off the old soundtracks. And it worked! All the music over the final credits crawl is a medley of Ifukube hits. Wonderful! The new original music was good, too.
For the most part I thought the CG work was excellent (see below), as was the miniature work on the destruction. Overall, the effects were great. Easily surpassing anything Toho has done to date.
The bad/uncool:
There were a couple of CG shots of the final G that were pretty bad, right after he fires his "Warrior God Appears Over Tokyo" beam. Jumpy movement, PS3 quality rendering...really looked like they didn't have the time/budget to finish those shots. Quite jarring considering all the other great shots before and after.
No Godzilla movie would be complete without some silly physics shots, and this one has a crazy one when they crash a bunch of trains into him and they all fly up around him like snakes, all still connected, and then kind of explode. Looked great, just was silly physics. Hard to explain, you'll know it when you see it. The scene with the two Shinkansens crashing into him was excellent.
While I appreciated all the classic Toho sound effects, I would have liked more powerful footsteps...you get a few, mostly the bass drum BOOM from the original, but I was hoping for some seat-shaking footfalls from this, the largest G ever. Said that, all the sound effects came together nicely to get across his massive size.
That's it for the good/bad.
I thought the story was interesting, but it might help to have some understanding of Japanese politics to really get it, since it all takes place amongst politicians and the military. And the Japanese...there is a LOT of dialogue in this movie, and most of it is extreme rapid-fire deliveries with quick cuts between speakers...and lots and lots of subtitles, although those were usually just introducing a character, labeling a location, or naming a piece of military equipment. It seemed there was more screen time with some sort of subtitle than without. So, it's a reading workout as well as an intense exercise in Japanese listening comprehension. I've got a degree in Japanese language, I've been living in Japan for 23 years, and I speak, read, and write Japanese all day at home and at work, but following the dialogue and reading all the subtitles in this movie was a real challenge. The Japanese friends I went with were also laughing at how crazy the dialogue was. Subtitling or dubbing this into English and other languages is going to be a huge job! I thought all the acting was competent and believable (except the non-Japanese actors...they were...not so good). Ishihara Satomi is GORGEOUS. But you knew that already. Lots of other familiar faces in the vast cast.
As I mentioned in other threads, it was a very rare treat to go into a movie with almost no idea of what to expect...so many surprises! Starting with the Proto-G, then the God Warrior beam...and the fin-beams and tail beam. All incredible. The way the main God Warrior beam quickly evolves was awesome...basically it starts like he's vomiting huge amounts of liquid, then it turns into ID4 City Destroyer fire, then it focuses into the final God Warrior beam...I'm colorblind, so I'm not sure it was blue or purple. Looked blue to me, as were the fin-beams. It think the tail beam was orange, or maybe red.
I expected more from the freaky skeletal crap at the end of his tail...all we get is the beam, the "mouth" snapping open at some point, then the final scene with the tail kind of blown apart with small creepy Godzilla-finned skeletons in/on it. I didn't think they were human skeletons, looked more like Aliens. I'll check again when I see it next.
The ending of course leaves the door wide open for the sequel(s), since we don't know if Godzilla is dead or just frozen, and what about those little Godzilla-ettes on the tail? I thought it looked more like the tail had broken off and that creature went AWOL...maybe that's the case, and those freaky little skeletons are a decoy (for the fandom). Dunno, but it was creepy and cool.
Again, I like everything, so my opinion may mean nothing to you...and why should it? I'm just a guy. A guy who loved this movie! Also, it's pretty scary, but I think my 6-year-old can handle it...I'm more concerned if he can sit through all that dialogue.
Anyway, I'll give this a solid 4.5 out of 5 stars. If nothing else, it wildly (and happily) exceeded my expectations. DAMN GOOD MOVIE.
Last edited by
Moonlight SY-3 on Fri Jul 29, 2016 12:32 pm, edited 8 times in total.
~Brian