Friday 16 May 2014

Review: 'Godzilla' brings some nostalgia


A scene from from 2014 film


A scene from from 2014 film "Godzilla."






  • Writer says "Godzilla" feels like two movies Scotch-taped together

  • The film stars Bryan Cranston and Aaron Taylor-Johnson

  • The director's previous film was 2010's low-budget "Monsters"




(EW.com) -- Let me put my cards on the table.


I was one of those kids who wasted their youth watching "Creature Double Feature" smackdowns between Godzilla and his arsenal of enemy combatants such as Mothra and Ghidorah. There was something about seeing these behemoths stomp Tokyo to dust that made me absolutely giddy: the primal doomsday terror of a beast created by A-bomb radiation, the model-shop ingenuity, the laughable man-in-a-rubber-suit campiness. It's been 16 years since Hollywood nearly soured that love affair, thanks to Roland Emmerich's 1998 atrocity. And I was hopeful that the splashy new 3-D reboot might rekindle the old flame.









Eiji Tsuburaya was a visual effects mastermind, and audiences are still reaping the rewards of his genius. As the man behind such classics as "Godzilla" and "Ultraman," Tsuburaya is the subject of the book "Eiji Tsuburaya: Master of Monsters." Here he runs through the direction of the battle between Godzilla and King Ghidorah in 1965's "The Great Monster War." Click through for a look at more images from the book.Eiji Tsuburaya was a visual effects mastermind, and audiences are still reaping the rewards of his genius. As the man behind such classics as "Godzilla" and "Ultraman," Tsuburaya is the subject of the book "Eiji Tsuburaya: Master of Monsters." Here he runs through the direction of the battle between Godzilla and King Ghidorah in 1965's "The Great Monster War." Click through for a look at more images from the book.



Mechanical engineer Akinori Takagi, left, and members of the effects crew work on the 1964 film "The Greatest Battle on Earth."Mechanical engineer Akinori Takagi, left, and members of the effects crew work on the 1964 film "The Greatest Battle on Earth."



Tsuburaya with a prop from 1968's Admiral Yamamoto. The book about his amazing career, "Eiji Tsuburaya: Master of Monsters," is now in paperback. Tsuburaya with a prop from 1968's Admiral Yamamoto. The book about his amazing career, "Eiji Tsuburaya: Master of Monsters," is now in paperback.



The King Kong costume constructed for 1962's "King Kong vs. Godzilla" was reused in episode 2 of the Eiji TV series "Ultra Q," "Goro and Goroh," as the monster Goro.The King Kong costume constructed for 1962's "King Kong vs. Godzilla" was reused in episode 2 of the Eiji TV series "Ultra Q," "Goro and Goroh," as the monster Goro.



Tsuburaya and the 33-foot Mothra "costume" in 1961. Note the detailed miniature fields in the background. Tsuburaya and the 33-foot Mothra "costume" in 1961. Note the detailed miniature fields in the background.



Rodan descends upon Fukuoka City in 1956's "Rodan." Since the title beast was a flying monster, Tsuburaya's crew had the opportunity to build more intricate and elaborate cityscapes than they had for "Godzilla."Rodan descends upon Fukuoka City in 1956's "Rodan." Since the title beast was a flying monster, Tsuburaya's crew had the opportunity to build more intricate and elaborate cityscapes than they had for "Godzilla."



Tsuburaya supervises Mothra's attack on New Kirk City in 1961.Tsuburaya supervises Mothra's attack on New Kirk City in 1961.



Tsuburaya supervises an effects scene from 1955's "Godzilla Raids Again." The Godzilla costume was considerably thinner than the one used in the first movie. Tsuburaya supervises an effects scene from 1955's "Godzilla Raids Again." The Godzilla costume was considerably thinner than the one used in the first movie.



Godzila on the beach, shooting a scene for the U.S. version of 1964's "Mothra vs. Godzilla."Godzila on the beach, shooting a scene for the U.S. version of 1964's "Mothra vs. Godzilla."



Katsumi Tezuka offers a drink to Haruto Nakajima, left, while filming the U.S. version of "Mothra vs. Godzilla."Katsumi Tezuka offers a drink to Haruto Nakajima, left, while filming the U.S. version of "Mothra vs. Godzilla."



Haruo Nakajima in the Godzilla costume from 1966's "Big Duel in the South Seas." By this time, he'd spent more than 10 years playing the role of Japan's most beloved monster. Haruo Nakajima in the Godzilla costume from 1966's "Big Duel in the South Seas." By this time, he'd spent more than 10 years playing the role of Japan's most beloved monster.



A publicity photo for 1954's "Godzilla."A publicity photo for 1954's "Godzilla."



"Godzilla" stars Akira Takarada, bottom, and Momoko Kochi clown around at Toshimitsu's fabrication studio with the unfinished monster costume in 1954. "Godzilla" stars Akira Takarada, bottom, and Momoko Kochi clown around at Toshimitsu's fabrication studio with the unfinished monster costume in 1954.




Eiji Tsuburaya: Master of Monsters

Eiji Tsuburaya: Master of Monsters

Eiji Tsuburaya: Master of Monsters

Eiji Tsuburaya: Master of Monsters

Eiji Tsuburaya: Master of Monsters

Eiji Tsuburaya: Master of Monsters

Eiji Tsuburaya: Master of Monsters

Eiji Tsuburaya: Master of Monsters

Eiji Tsuburaya: Master of Monsters

Eiji Tsuburaya: Master of Monsters

Eiji Tsuburaya: Master of Monsters

Eiji Tsuburaya: Master of Monsters

Eiji Tsuburaya: Master of Monsters






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Photos: Master of MonstersPhotos: Master of Monsters



Unfortunately, Gareth Edwards' "Godzilla" feels like two movies Scotch-taped together. In one, Bryan Cranston plays a nuclear engineer with a tragic past who's racing to expose the truth about a series of seismic anomalies, Aaron Taylor-Johnson is his estranged soldier son, and Ken Watanabe and Sally Hawkins are a pair of exposition-spouting scientists trying to keep straight faces while talking about electromagnetic pulses and mankind's hubris. In the other, mammoth CG beasts knock the snot out of one another. Only one of these movies is any good. Thankfully, it's the monster one.


Edwards, whose only previous film was 2010's low-budget "Monsters," has been given a quick call-up to the majors with the reported $160 million "Godzilla." He doesn't seem too interested in his actors — they're more plodding than their reptilian costars and you don't care about a single one of them — but Edwards does know how to fashion some serious monster mayhem. Taking a cue from "Jaws," he wisely delays Godzilla's appearance, building suspense. In movies like these, it's all about the slow tease and the big reveal. As an appetizer, though, he gives us a pair of ''MUTOs'' (massive unidentified terrestrial organisms) — a male and female duo of giant, Giger-esque creatures with sleek pincer jaws that resemble humongous staple removers. The MUTOs, who arrive on the scene after leveling a Japanese nuclear reactor, care about two things: feeding on the radiation that created them and mating with each other in...San Francisco of all places. Tony Bennett would be proud.


When Godzilla first lumbers on screen to hunt the MUTOs and ''restore balance,'' he feels both nostalgically familiar and excitingly new. As big as a Sheraton and with a shriek that rumbles your insides, he appears beefier and meaner than you remember. But looks can be deceiving. Godzilla is humanity's only hope for destroying the MUTOs. Or as Watanabe's Dr. Serizawa says, ''Let them fight!'' And fight they do, in an epic clash that turns the Bay Area to rubble. Unlike last year's disappointing Pacific Rim, Godzilla actually shows us its monsters without a scrim of rain and a cloak of darkness. And the thrill of the film is getting the chance to fetishize their sheer size and physicality as they rip through power lines and demolish buildings with their lashing tails. In its handful of moments like these, "Godzilla" almost makes you feel like a kid again. Grade: B-


See the original story at EW.com.


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