Shin Godzilla
When a massive, gilled monster emerges from the deep and tears through the city, the government scrambles to save its citizens. A rag-tag team of volunteers cuts through a web of red tape to uncover the monster's weakness and its mysterious ties to a foreign superpower. But time is not on their side - the greatest catastrophe to ever befall the world is about to evolve right before their very eyes.
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- Cast:
- Hiroki Hasegawa , Yutaka Takenouchi , Satomi Ishihara , Kengo Kora , Satoru Matsuo , Mikako Ichikawa , Issey Takahashi
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Reviews
So much average
A waste of 90 minutes of my life
A Disappointing Continuation
A great movie, one of the best of this year. There was a bit of confusion at one point in the plot, but nothing serious.
An unknown accident occurs in Tokyo Bay's Aqua Line, which causes an emergency cabinet to assemble. All of the sudden, a giant creature immediately appears, destroying town after town with its landing reaching the capital. This mysterious giant monster is named "Godzilla". Horrible meetings between boring people, boring and mediocre action, horrendous acting and the worst of them all? Some of the worst cgi effects i have ever seen in my life that make the 1998 Godzilla look like The Godfather in front of this garbage fire of a movie. (0/10)
Perfect acting, perfect casting, perfect CGI, great plot!nothing more to say, it was an awesome movie!
SHIN GODZILLA, we're told, (now) translates as "god incarnate." Uh-huh. Too bad we don't get to see enough of this new (shin) "god incarnate" in action to judge for ourselves... Like the lousy ameriKan version of just a couple of years ago, this entry boasts some great but all too brief scenes of destruction; this version also unfortunately bogs down like said ameriKan version in the minutia of government and military behind-the-scenes "readiness." There are at least five minutes of good action in this two-hour debacle. The rest, as they say, is for the f---ing birds...
A sign of the times, there is no longer a man in a rubber suit . This iteration of everyone's favorite kaiju is all CGI. In the past, Godzilla has been a metaphor American militarism, environmental catastrophism, GM-Oblivion, Japanese war-guilt, etc., and now, in a very political "Shin Godzilla", he appears to have been recruited as an endlessly adapting existential threat designed to deride a stultified, stratified, inefficient, and timid bureaucracy. The movie is long on governmental procrastinating, hand-wringing, and buck-passing, and short on monster mayhem, but all-in-all, it's an interesting addition to the canon. Briefly, a somewhat embryonic (but still immense) bug-eyed, proto-Godzilla drags itself out of the water and levels part of Tokyo before metamorphosing into a bipedal form that flattens more of the city before returning to the bay. Eventually a colossal 'mature' morph emerges from the bay and returns to continue obliterating Tokyo. Not-surprisingly, man-kind's puny weapons have little effect on the monster, who has now 'evolved' highly efficient defense mechanisms that make short work of the sacrificial planes and tanks sent to torment it. After much pseudo-scientific discussion, freezing him with anti-coagulants (?!) is proposed and the race against the clock begins: if the locals can't stop the monster, the Americans intend, for a third time, to rain nuclear fire down upon Japan. The movie pays homage to the original: - the CGI monster still 'could' have a man inside (unlike Emmerich's much maligned 1998 version), the classic roar is heard, and effective use is made of Akira Ifukube's iconic score from the 1954 original. Not a film for everyone - probably not even for all Godzilla fans - but (IMO) a worthy addition to the long running and constantly evolving series (this is film number 31 not counting Merv Newland's 1969 "Bambi Meets Godzilla"). note: watched in Japanese with English sub-titles