Since
Gojira in 1954, there have been many Godzilla
films. Ranging from the dramatic and terrifying allegory of nuclear
destruction, showcased in the original, to the out and out goofiness;
with such installments as
Godzilla vs Hedorah, where silliness sat right alongside an ecological message, or with the likes of
Godzilla vs Gigan,
where the world was in peril from not just environment problems but
alien invaders as well. Godzilla would zigzag between world destroyer to
world savior, often within the same movie. He is a most complicated
beastie. It’s been ten years since the big G had his last outing but now
once again buildings quake at his approach and crowds flee in terror.
So how does this latest incarnation stack up against the decades of
previous incarnations, you ask? Well it’s…okay.
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"Roarrgh!" |
This is another reboot of the series, which is nothing new to Godzilla
as he’s been rebooted more times than any other character in cinema, and
this outing starts with the standard mystery about “strange goings on”
with the usual conspiracy theories and cover-ups. The film begins with
the focus on nuclear power plant physicist Joe Brody (Bryan Cranston in
thankless role) who loses his wife during a disaster at his plant. He’s
sure that it wasn’t an accident but that some-
thing is responsible.
Jump a head fifteen years and Brody is trying to convince his now grown
son that he’s not crazy. Of course he’s not crazy and sure enough the
shit hits the fan and a monsters starts rampaging across the land. Thing
is it’s
not Godzilla but something the military are calling a
M.U.T.O. and according to scientist Dr. Serizawa (Ken Watanabe) Godzilla
is the only thing that can stop it.
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Sorry folks, this ain't Rodan. |
The director is Gareth Edwards, who made the excellent film
Monsters
which dealt with how people would handle living in a world of giant
monsters, this focus was because he didn’t have the budget for huge
monster destruction scenes and it worked, but now he’s been given keys
to the candy store and is able to give us a much as he wants, and he
does provide a lot more destruction. Sadly much of it is fairly hollow
as we have no characters to care for.
The main failure this film has is in its “hero” Ford Brody (Aaron
Taylor-Johnson) who is so bland and ineffectual that one longs for
something large to squash him, but sadly his only real trait is his
ability to not die. And he “not dies” quite a bit. It seems to me his
sole purpose in the film was to be almost killed by something, over and
over again. He hardly has any impact on the story, but then again not
many of the human players do, they try to figure out what’s going on,
scramble around for a bit, attempt to stop the monsters, and then fail.
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"I'm going to find Godzilla, and Kick-Ass." |
The original
Gojira dealt with the tragedy and horror
such an attack would have on people, it also gave us leads that were
complex and conflicted. Not so in this film. Ken Watanabe’s character
tosses out a few platitudes every now and then but they ring pretty
hollow.
This is basically a disaster film that just so happens to have
Godzilla in it. We get scenes of awesome destruction while two
dimensional stock characters react to them. As I am a sucker for
disaster movies I wasn’t to put out by this but some people wanting more
monster action may be disappointed. The last act does provide a
fantastic showdown between the monsters and should keep any kaijū fan
happy.
Notes:
• Godzilla seems to have a stealth mode as he often appears suddenly without any advance warning.
• Not sure what the point of rooftop snipers are in a fight against giant monsters.
• The M.U.T.O. do resemble the Cloverfield monster to a great degree.
• Lesson to be learned by all Godzilla films; don’t work at a power plant.
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