You are here:

Reel Reviews

Facebook

Godzilla (1954) - Blu-ray Review

E-mail
User Rating: / 0
PoorBest 

Godzilla - Blu-ray Review

5 stars

What do bathtub toy boats and plastic helicopters have in common with a dude in a monster suit?  Hint: the action takes place in Japan.  That’s right.  Godzilla, the mother of all mega-monster movies, is returning to run rampage through your home entertainment system.  Thanks to the remastering movie buffs over at Criterion, everyone’s favorite prehistoric lizard is getting a shiny new upgrade.

Directed by Ishirō Honda and produced by Tomoyuki Tanaka, Godzilla (a.k.a. Gojira) – the product of nuclear creation as the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki and the Daigo Fukuryū Maru incident were still very much in the consciousness of the Japanese people – is a demanding little spectacle of a film that is as equally entertaining as it is imaginative as a cautionary tale.  It also, in spite of its visible wires and obvious special effects, is a surprisingly solid melodrama.

This release is the original un-Americanized film (although the version with Raymond Burr is included in the set for its fans) and it’s a markedly truer tale without English speaking distractions.  From beginning to end, Godzilla – as written by Honda and Takeo Murata – works as a monstrous metaphor for war and nuclear destruction and, as visualized by special effects director Eiji Tsuburaya, takes the shape of an enormous reptilian creature pissed at being awoken or risen from its prehistoric slumber.

The human part of the narrative focuses on Archeologist Kyohei Yamane (Takashi Shimura) and his daughter Emiko (Momoko Kōchi), who very much wants to break off her engagement to Daisuke Serizawa (Akihiko Hirata), her father’s colleague.  She would like instead to marry Hideto Ogata (Akira Takarada) and forget any sort of arranged marriage that her father might have for her.

While her heart lies with Ogata, she cannot find the strength to tell Serizawa the truth of her love…especially after he has shown her the weapon (his creation) that could be used to kill this Tokyo destroying monster and finish him off once and for all.  Only Serizawa fears what it’s use might result in should it fall into the wrong hands.

Sacrifices must be made.  Hearts must be broken.  Godzilla must be stopped.  Mankind must not toy around in the nuclear age.  This is the territory of Honda’s multiple series-inspiring classic; a film that might have more to do with the aftermath of war than the actual war on the monster itself.  This isn’t camp.  This isn’t goofy silliness either.  These are young men and young women expressing their fears in the nuclear age.  Survival; they lived through it.  To them, Godzilla is a real thing.  A truth more terrifying than a towering monster, mind you.  And every frame is dripping with this sensitive message.  If you can’t get past the rubber suit and see the actual meaning to this classic cautionary tale, well, you should probably sit closer to the screen.

Godzilla, now on sparkling blu-ray, will take your breath away.  From the now-classic growling score from Akira Ifukube to the radioactive trilobite theatrics, Godzilla is a remarkable, if not misunderstood, gem of a foreign film.

Blu-ray movie review of the Criterion Collection release of Godzilla (1954)

blog comments powered by Disqus
 

Facebook Share

Share this page on facebook

Follow us on Twitter

Facebook Us


Top Selling DVDs

Sponsors

Your Ad Here
Follow Us
Google +1 Us