|
and
Kaiju
Eiga 1960
- 1969
|

|
Mosura
aka MOTHRA
TOHO 1961 COLOUR 100 minutes
Director: Ishiro Honda
Producer: Tomoyuki Tanaka
Special Effects: Eiji Tsuburaya
Frankie Sakai, Hiroshi Koizumi, Kyoko Katawa, The Itoh sisters
Mothra is a giant moth which lives on an island irradiated by H-bomb
tests along with its human companions the 'fairies' - the Peanuts
sisters Sakai and Yoka. When its huge egg and the fairies are abducted,
Mothra trails them to Tokyo where its huge size causes immense damage.
The egg hatches producing a gigantic caterpillar which adds to the
destruction before being rescued by mum. Mothra, its offspring and
the fairies are allowed to return to the island where the sisters
undertake to control the creatures to prevent further demolition.
A voice-over version was released in the U.S. directed by Lee Kresel
and produced by David Horne from a screenplay by Robert Myerson
|
|
King
Kong Tai Gojira
aka KING KONG VERSUS GODZILLA
TOHO 1963 COLOUR 99 minutes
Director: Ishiro Honda
Producer: Tomoyuki Tanaka
Special Effects: Eiji Tsuburaya
Tadao Takashima, Yu Fujiki, Akiko Wakabayashi, Mie Hama
Kenji Sahara, Akihiko Hirata, Ichiro Arishima
A U.S. atomic submarine causes the destruction of a huge iceberg
in which a Godzilla has become entombed. True to type it heads straight
for Tokyo in order to do a bit of landscaping. Meanwhile, King Kong
is living quietly on an island in the Solomons, fighting with the
odd giant octopus and suchlike in order to protect the local fishermen.
He is found sedated from the effects of a drink made from local
berries and transported to Tokyo. On awakening, his hangover isn't
helped by Godzilla demolishing buildings all over the place and
he promptly escapes and proceeds to sort him out. After the initial
skirmishes they finally meet in a battle on Mount Fuji where an
earthquake throws both antagonists into the sea. Godzilla decides
he has had enough sightseeing at this stage and disappears, leaving
King Kong to wade ashore victorious and resume his day job on the
remote island that he had been taken from. The U.S. version was
directed by Thomas Montgomery and produced by John Beck. It was
cut to 91 minutes including added scenes featuring actors Michael
Keith, James Yogi and Harry Holcombe. This completed a 'round trip'
for the original storyline which was titled variously 'King Kong
Versus Frankenstein', 'King Kong Versus The Ginko' and 'Prometheus
Versus King Kong'. It was purchased from America by TOHO and converted
into a Godzilla movie
|
|
Uchudai
Dogora
aka
DAGORA
aka SPACE MONSTER DOGORA
aka DOGORA THE SPACE MONSTER
TOHO 1964 COLOUR 83 minutes
Director: Ishiro Honda
Producer: Tomoyuki Tanaka
Special Effects: Eiji Tsuburaya
Yosuke Natsuki, Yoko Fujiyama, Akiko Wakabayashi, Hiroshi Koizumi
Radiation-exposed cells mutate into giant tentacled floating jellyfish
which hang around over Japan feeding on carbon and other elements
through their tentacles. They have a particular partiality for diamonds
which is hard luck on a couple of thieves who have acquired a truckload
of the things. As they grow, their hunger develops and they advance
through the consumption of ships and trains until they decide to
have a real blow-out with the Wakato bridge as the main course.
They are discovered to be vulnerable to a type of wasp venom and
the stuff is gathered from all over Japan until scientists eventually
have enough to destroy the creatures. The U.S. version was cut to
80 minutes
|
|
Mosura
Tai Gojira
aka GOJIRA TAI MOSURA
aka MOTHRA VERSUS GODZILLA
aka GODZILLA VERSUS THE THING
aka GODZILLA FIGHTS THE GIANT MOTH
aka GODZILLA VERSUS THE GIANT MOTH
TOHO 1964 COLOUR 94 minutes
Director: Ishiro Honda
Producer: Tomoyuki Tanaki
Special Effects: Eije Tsuburaya, Sadamasa Arikawa, Akira Watanabe
Motoyoshi Tomioka, Kuichiro Kishida
Akira Takarada, Yuriko Hoshi, Hiroshi Koizumi, Yu Fujiki, The Itoh
sisters
A hurricane washes away Mothra's latest egg and it ends up on the
mainland seashore where it is found and stolen by the owners of
a carnival. The fairies try to persuade them to return the egg in
vain. In the meantime, Godzilla decides that the Tokyo skyline needs
further alterations and arrives for another visit. The fairies are
asked to persuade Mothra to help the city, which she does, but is
defeated by Godzilla. The giant egg hatches, producing two gigantic
caterpillars that enclose Godzilla in a sticky web of silken threads
and push him over a cliff. Once again, the fairies return to their
island with the two offspring to nurture them into new Mothras.
Two versions were released in the U.S. cut by 4 minutes and 7 minutes
|
|
Katei
Gunkan
aka
ATRAGON
aka ATARAGON
aka ATORAGON THE FLYING SUPERSUB
TOHO 1964 COLOUR 96 minutes
Director: Ishiro Honda
Producer: Tomoyuki Tanaka
Special Effects: Eiji Tsuburaya
Tadao Takashima, Yoko Fujiyama, Hiroshi Koizumi, Jun Tazaki, Ken
Uehara
Kenji Sahara, Tetsuko Kobayashi, Akemi Kita, Akihiko Hirata
Another in the 'not quite' Kaiju Eiga film category but close enough
to warrant inclusion, as the monster in the film was to be resurrected
in a later film to celebrate the genre. The Earth is threatened
by the evil empire of Mu, an underwater civilisation and its god,
the giant sea serpent Wenda. Earth's only chance lies in the atomic
supersub Atoragon, a combination airship/tunnelling machine/submarine
under the command of an admiral who refused to surrender the ship
when 'the war' ended. Mu threatens to destroy the world unless the
supersub surrenders but the admiral has different ideas and eventually
triumphs after a battle with Wenda. This movie was the first to
use enemies on a global scale rather than just as a threat to Japan.
The U.S. version was cut by 8 mins
|
|
Ghidorah
Sandai Kaiju - Chikyu Saidai No Kessan
aka GHIDRAH
aka MONSTER OF MONSTERS
aka CHIKYU SAIDAI NO KESSAN
aka THE BIGGEST FIGHT ON EARTH
aka THE BIGGEST BATTLE ON EARTH
aka GHIDORA THE THREE HEADED MONSTER
TOHO 1965 COLOUR 85 minutes
Director: Ishiro Honda
Producer: Tomoyuki Tanaka
Special Effects: Eiji Tsuburaya
Yosuke Natsuki, Yurihiko Hoshi, Hiroshi Koizumi, Takashi Shimura
Eiji Okada, The Itoh sisters
Old laser breath is back! Ghidorah the three-headed space dragon
raises its ugly head again and threatens the Earth in its usual
destructive fashion. Mothra is called in to help out but, finding
that she cannot defeat the monster by herself, enlists the help
of Godzilla and Rodan. Poor old Mount Fuji sees the final action
again when Mothra envelops Ghidorah in a silky cocoon allowing Godzilla
and Rodan to despatch the unfortunate invader into the sea
|
|
Kaiju
Daisenso
aka MONSTER ZERO
aka INVASION OF PLANET X
aka BATTLE OF THE ASTROS
aka INVASION OF THE ASTRO MONSTER
TOHO 1965 COLOUR 96 minutes
Director: Ishiro Honda
Producer: Tomoyuki Tanaka
Special Effects: Eiji Tsuburaya
Nick Adams, Akira Takarada, Akira Kubo, Keiko Sawai, Kumo Mizuno
Jun Tazaki, Yoshio Tsuchiya
The inhabitants of an alien planet are being plagued by Ghidrah,
a giant laser-breathing three-headed dragon capable of supersonic
flight and emitting death rays from its eyes. They solicit help
from Earth in the form of Rodan and Godzilla, transporting them
to their own planet in cocoons of energy. An evil group on the aliens
planet try to capture and combine the power of the three monsters
in a bid to invade Earth resulting in a space rescue mission being
launched, led by Nick Adams, to bring 'our monsters' back home.
Ghidorah holds the distinction of being the first 'real' monster
from outer space in Kaiju Eiga films. Although Nick Adams appeared
in the original Japanese version he also made extra new scenes for
editing into the U.S. release
|
|
Furankenshutain
Tai Baragon
aka FRANKENSTEIN AND THE GIANT LIZARD
aka FRANKENSTEIN CONQUERS THE WORLD
aka FRANKENSTEIN vs THE GIANT DEVIL FISH
aka FRANKENSTEIN vs BARAGON
aka FRANKENSTEIN vs THE SUBTERRANEAN MONSTER
TOHO 1965 COLOUR 95 minutes
Director: Ishiro Honda
Producer: Tomoyuki Tanaka
Special Effects: Eiji Tsuburaya
Tadao Takashima, Nick Adams, Kumi Mizuno, Yoshio Tsuchiya, Takashi
Shimura
Frankenstein's heart is shipped to Hiroshima by the Nazis where
the box is opened just as the atomic bomb detonates. A starving
survivor - a small boy - eats part of the irradiated flesh and is
mutated into a 30ft monster with a Frankenstein-like appearance.
He is called Frankenstein by the locals and finds a home on the
slopes of Mount Fuji where he is cared for by an American scientist.
The boy comes to the rescue of Japan when it is attacked by a Godzilla-like
giant reptile called Baragon. The oddity of the alternative titles
is due to the fact that the original planned adversary was a giant
octopus but only a few scenes were completed before Baragon was
substituted in place of the unfortunate cephalopod. These scenes
were later used in 'Furankenshutain No Kaiju - Sanda Tai Gailah'
in 1966. This film was a co-production with American International
producers Reuben Bercovitch and Henry Saperstein with the actor
Nick Adams appearing in the original Japanese version instead of
edited-in scenes for the U.S. market as was the normal practice
up to then. The U.S. version was cut to 87 minutes
|
|
Daikaiju
Gamera
aka GAMERA
aka GAMMERA
aka GAMERA THE INVINCIBLE
DAIEI 1966 COLOUR 88 minutes
Director: Noriaki Yuasa
Producer: Yonejiro Saito
Special Effects: Yonesaburo Tsukiji
Eiji Funakoshi, Harumi Kiritachi, Junichiro Yamashita
Yoshiro Kitahara, Michiko Sugata
Gamera is a monster turtle awakened by a nuclear explosion. He heads
for Tokyo ( where else? ) destroying everything in his path with
his fire-breathing capability. The creature is eventually lured
into the nose cone of a rocket and shipped off in the direction
of Mars. No wonder the Martians hate us so much! The U.S. version
contained extra scenes featuring actors Brian Donlevy, Diane Findlay
and Albert Dekker. These allowed the version to portray the Americans
as the heroes of the film by discovering the monster's weakness
|
|
Furankenshutain
No Kaiju - Sanda Tai Gailah
aka DUEL OF THE GARGANTUAS
aka THE WAR OF THE GARGANTUAS
TOHO 1966 COLOUR 88 minutes
Director: Ishiro Honda
Producer: Tomoyuki Tanaka
Special Effects: Eiji Tsuburaya
Russ Tamblyn, Kumi Mizuno, Kenji Sahara, Kipp Hamilton, Jun Tazaki
This film was intended to be a sequel to 'Furankenshutain Tai Baragon',
hence the name, but the American producer decided to have references
to the previous film removed when it became apparent that the monsters
bore more resemblance to King Kong than Frankenstein. Included in
the 'lost' scenes was an explanation of how the monster's 'twin'
came into being. In the original film the monster lost a hand which
regenerated itself a complete new body. The original, Sanda, is
brown in colour and friendly while the regenerated twin Gailah is
green and pretty tetchy. The Japanese military defeat Gailah when
he goes on the rampage but he is nursed back to health by his good
'brother whom he then, thanklessly, tries to destroy. The subsequent
battle demolishes most of Tokyo before both the twins disappear
when they are caught in a volcanic eruption. The opening scenes
of the film showing Gailah coming out of the sea are accompanied
by the giant octopus ship attack scenes edited out of the original
movie. The film was made in association with American Intnl producer
Henry Saperstein for co-release on the U.S. market hence the inclusion
of the American actors
|
|
Nankai
No Daiketto
aka BIG DUEL IN THE NORTH SEA
aka EBIRAH TERROR OF THE DEEP
aka GODZILLA VERSUS THE SEA MONSTER
TOHO 1966 COLOUR 87 minutes
Director: Jun Fukuda
Producer: Tomoyuki Tanaka
Special Effects: Eiji Tsuburaya
Akira Takarada, Toru Watanabe, Hideo Sunazuka, Kumi Mizuno, Jun
Tazaki
An evil organisation called Red Bamboo attempts to take over the
world. Godzilla is unable to help much as he is otherwise engaged
fighting off the threat of Ebirah, a giant crab-like creature which
is guarding the organisation's illegal nuclear weapons factory on
a remote island. He eventually dismembers the monster in their final
big showdown fight but this doesn't seem to present too much of
a problem for Ebirah as he managed to regenerate himself from the
leftovers for an appearance in a later film. Mothra is called on
from the substitute's bench to assist the island's beleaguered humans
under threat from Red Bamboo and manages to evacuate them from the
island before it disappears in a huge explosion. Scenes from this
film were used by Ishiro Honda in 'Oru Kaiju Daishingeki' (1969)
|
|
Gamera
Tai Barugon
aka GAMERA VERSUS BARUGON
aka THE WAR OF THE MONSTERS
aka GAMBARA VERSUS BARUGON
DAIEI 1966 COLOUR 101 minutes
Director: Shigeo Tanaka
Producer: Hidemasa Nagata
Special Effects: Noriaki Yuasa
Kojiro Hondo, Kyoko Enami, Akira Natsuki, Koji Fujiyama
Yuzo Hayakawa, Ichiro Sugai
In his previous appearance Gamera ended up by being launched into
space on board a rocket. This film explains how the ship was hit
by a meteorite, sending it off course and back to Earth. During
this brief excursion Gamera seems to have magically obtained the
ability of jet-propelled flight. Meanwhile, in New Guinea, a mysterious
opal egg hatches into a reptile which grows into the 130ft monster
Barugon, a creature with a large spike on its head and more spikes
on its back which radiate a deadly rainbow-coloured energy field.
Gamera is attracted to the power in this energy field and launches
an attack against the beast, laying waste to Tokyo and Osaka in
the process. The monster turtle eventually triumphs after dragging
Barugon into Lake Biwa where he apparently expires, unseen, in a
spreading cloud of blue 'blood'. Barugon is not the same creature
as TOHO's Baragon and this appears to be the only time where one
studio's creation was ripped off by another. TOHO responded to this
move by making more films with ever-increasing combinations of its
own range of monsters, culminating in their 20th movie 'special'
which included virtually all of them together
|
|
Uchu
Daikaiju Guilala
aka GIRARA
aka GUILALA
aka GUIRARA
aka THE X FROM OUTER SPACE
SHOCHIKU 1967 COLOUR 89 minutes
Director: Kazui Nihonmatsu
Producer: Akihiko Shimada
Special Effects: Hiroshi Ikeda
Eiji Okada, Toshiya Wazaki, Peggy Neal, Itoko Harada, Torahiko Hamada
Shinichi Yanagisawa, Franz Gruber, Keisuke Sonoi, Mike Daning
A strange substance becomes attached to a Mars-Moon space shuttle
which mutates into the monster Guilala. It continues to grow in
size, absorbing all energy from the weapons directed against it.
Scientists discover an anti-matter substance they call Guilalium
which they can only obtain from deep space. By the time they return
to Earth from their collecting expedition the monster has flattened
a fair amount of Japanese real estate and is in the process of attacking
the Astroflying Centre situated on the slopes of Mount Fuji. The
anti-matter substance is dropped all over the monster and causes
it to degenerate back to its original cell size which is then tied
up in a shoebox and shipped back into outer space. SHOCHIKU's first
Kaiju Eiga film was a production aimed at both the Japanese and
American markets hence the mixed cast list
|
|
Gamera
Tai Viras
aka DESTROY ALL PLANETS
aka GAMERA VERSUS VIRAS
aka GAMERA TAI UCHUKAIJU BAIRASU
aka GAMERA VERSUS OUTER SPACE MONSTER VIRAS
DAIEI 1968 COLOUR 75 minutes
Director: Noriyaki Yuasa
Producer: Hidemasa Nagata
Special Effects: Kazafumi Fujii, Yuso Kaneko
Kojiro Hongo, Toru Takatsuka, Carl Crane, Michiko Yaegaki
Mari Atsumi, Junko Yashiro, Peter Williams
At the start of the film Gamera is seen defeating an alien invasion
ship but all is not as it seems. The children-loving Gamera subsequently
captures a couple of boy scouts who had unwittingly caused a submarine
to submerge while playing about in it. They realise that Gamera
is not quite himself and discover that he is being subjected to
a form of mind control by the 'defeated' aliens. They manage to
release Gamera from the aliens' control and he heads into space
to do battle with them and their ship's protector, the three-tentacled
six-legged Viras, defeating them all in the climactic battle at
the end of the film. The films around this time started to move
away from 'pure' Kaiju Eiga, introducing different contextual elements
such as alien invaders, space monsters and mechanised creatures.
They also contained a greater degree of individual human involvement
in the main storylines
|
|
Gojira
No Musuko
aka SON OF GODZILLA
TOHO 1967 COLOUR 86 minutes
Director: Jun Fukuda
Producer: Tomoyuki Tanaka
Special Effects: Eiji Tsuburaya, Sadamasa Arikawa
Tadao Takashima, Akira Kubo, Beverly Maeda, Akihiko Hirata
Yoshio Tsuchiya, Kenji Sahara, Susumu Kurobe
The island of Zorgel's temperature rises dramatically as a result
of weather experiments being conducted by a Dr. Kashumi. This causes
all the flora and fauna on the island to grow at a fantastic rate
to giant proportions. It also causes a dormant Godzilla egg to hatch,
producing a baby which is looked after by its father ( this raises
the interesting question - why are there no female Godzillas? Kaiju
Eiga films are notable for steering clear of tacky distractions
like romance and connected activities, either monster or human).
The little Godzilla becomes friendly with Reiko, one of the humans
on the island and they both come to her aid when she is attacked
by the giant spider Spigon. They also have an altercation with a
few giant praying mantises. The wildlife on the island becomes increasingly
dangerous and uncontrollable which prompts the scientists into a
decision to freeze the whole place, sending everything, including
Dad and Baby Godzilla into hibernation, and abandon it for a safer
location. This film was cut to 71 minutes for the U.S. market despite
containing arguably the best special effects in the entire original
Godzilla series
|
|
King
Kong No Gyakushu
aka KING KONG ESCAPES
aka THE REVENGE OF KING KONG
aka KING KONG'S COUNTERATTACK
TOHO 1967 COLOUR 104 minutes
Director: Ishiro Honda
Producer: Tomoyuki Tanaka
Special Effects: Eiji Tsuburaya
Rhodes Reason, Mie Hama, Linda Miller, Akira Takarada, Eisei Amamoto
King Kong returns in a battle with, and the defeat of, a giant dinosaur.
He is befriended by a group of people on a scientific expedition
and becomes very fond of its female member. Meanwhile, evildoers
Dr. Who ( no, not that one! ) and Madame Piranha are carrying out
the mining and extraction of a radioactive ore with the help of
a giant robotic King Kong lookalike. When the monster machine starts
to malfunction they kidnap the real thing in order to keep up their
production quota. King Kong manages to break out of his prison and
comes up against the giant robot, Mechni-Kong, finally defeating
him in a titanic battle on top of Tokyo tower. To add to the destructive
entertainment the film also includes some scenes of a submarine
being attacked by a sea monster which is only mildly incidental
to the storyline. The U.S. version was cut to 96 minutes and included
extra scenes featuring much more English dialogue than the original.
This version was directed and produced by Arthur Rankin from a screenplay
by William Keenan
|
|
Daikyoju
Gappa
aka GAPPA THE TRIFIBIAN MONSTER
aka MONSTER FROM A PREHISTORIC PLANET
NIKKATSU 1967 COLOUR 90 minutes
Director: Haruyasu Noguchi
Producer: Hideo Koi
Special Effects: Akira Watanabe
Tamio Kawaji, Yoko Yamamoto, Yuji Okada, Koji Wada, Tatsuya Fuji
Baby Gappa is kidnapped by an entrepreneur who wants to display
him in a carnival-type freak show. The film relates the story of
Mum and Dad Gappa's journey in their attempt to locate and liberate
him, visiting tourist attractions like Mount Fuji, Hareda Airport
and the Atami holiday resort in the process. Almost incidental to
the story are fun happenings such as earthquakes, tsunamis and erupting
volcanoes which tend to delay their progress until they finally
catch up with him at Tokyo airport. In the final scenes the big
Gappas teach their offspring how to fly before returning to their
remote island home. This was a one-off excursion into the realms
of Kaiju Eiga for NIKKATSU who generally produced gangster and adult
films. It is really more a parody of the genre than a fully paid-up
member. The film was cut to 81 minutes for the U.S. market
|
|
Gamera
Tai Gaos
aka DAIKAIJU KUCHUSEN
aka GAMERA VERSUS GAOS
aka GAMERA VERSUS GYAOS
aka BOYICHI AND THE SUPERMONSTER
aka THE RETURN OF THE GIANT MONSTERS
DAIEI 1967 COLOUR 87 minutes
Director: Noriyaki Yuasa
Producer: Hidemasa Nagata
Special Effects: Kazufumi Fujii, Yuzo Kaneko
Kojiro Hongo, Kichijiro Ueda, Naoyuki Abe, Reiko Kasahara
Taro Marui, Yukitaro Hotaru, Yoshio Kitahara
Gamera battles against Gaos, a fox-like reptilian creature who is
the antithesis of Gamera. Gaos eats humans ( a rarity in Kaiju Eiga
), can fly faster than Gamera and hates sunlight and fire. Because
of this last, it has the ability to emit a type of fire-extinguishing
smog from its chest. The giant turtle's image has had a makeover
in this film to include an ability to eat atom bombs and has now
become very friendly towards children, whose help it enlists at
every opportunity. Gamera eventually triumphs by trapping Gaos in
the sunlight which eventually destroys him. This new-found affinity
with children resulted in Gamera becoming second only to Godzilla
in the Kaiju Eiga popularity stakes. The U.S. release was cut to
85 minutes
|
|
Kaiju
Soshingeki
aka DESTROY ALL MONSTERS
aka OPERATION MONSTERLAND
aka THE MARCH OF THE MONSTERS
TOHO 1968 COLOUR 89 minutes
Director: Ishiro Honda
Producer: Tomoyuki Tanaka
Special Effects: Eiji Tsuburaya, Sadamasa Arikawa
Akira Kubo, Jun Tazaki, Yoshio Tsuchiya, Kyoko Ai, Yukihiko Kobayashi
Kenji Sahara, Andrew Hughes, Nadao Kirino, The Itoh sisters
This film was made to celebrate TOHO's 20th 'monster' picture and
starred eleven of their creations. Set in the year 1999, the monsters
suddenly move away from the island where they have been living in
peace, and where they are studied by the UNGCC, to set about the
destruction of the world's capital cities. This is not in their
true nature and it is subsequently discovered that they, and the
scientists who 'guard' them, have been taken over by Kilaaks, an
alien race who have planted mind control transmitters in their necks.
The Kilaaks, a female race, have bases both on the moon and in a
secret underground location on Earth. When they consider that the
monsters have caused enough destruction they try to get rid of them
by unleashing the awesome Ghidorah against them. The ensuing battle
for supremacy takes place on Mount Fuji with baby Godzilla leading
the cheering onlookers. After their final victory the monsters return
to their island home
|
|
Gamera
Tai Guiron
aka GAMERA VERSUS GUIRON
aka ATTACK OF THE MONSTERS
DAIEI 1969 COLOUR 88 minutes
Director: Noriyaki Yuasa
Producer: Hidemasa Nagata
Special Effects: Kazafumi Fujii
Nobuhiro Kashima, Christopher Murphy, Miyuki Akiyama, Yuko Hamada
Eiji Funakoshi, Ken Omura
Gamera's fifth outing continues to display his love for children.
Flying to a planet on the far side of the sun he battles against
Guiron, a monster who looks like a living knife with arms. He has
undertaken the trip to rescue a couple of children who have been
abducted by gorgeous female aliens whose intentions are to eat the
childrens' brains which they consider a great delicacy. Have they
tried sushi?
|
|
Oru
Kaiju Daishingeki
aka GODZILLA'S REVENGE
TOHO 1969 COLOUR 92 minutes
Director: Ishiro Honda
Producer: Tomoyuki Tanaka
Special Effects: Eiji Tsuburaya
Kenji Sahara, Tomonori Yazaki, Machiko Naka, Sachio Sakai
Chotaro Togin, Yoshibumi Tajima
Ichiro, a young boy who is the victim of bullying, is also on the
run from bank robbers after being a witness to their crimes. He
falls asleep and dreams of visiting monster island, Ogasawara, to
talk and play with his hero, Minya, Godzilla's son. In his dream,
seeing Minya battling an imaginary Godzilla-like monster much larger
than himself gives Ichiro the courage to face and fight his own
enemies when he awakens. This film virtually marked the end of an
era. It was the last Kaiju Eiga film of the Sixties and the last
monster film to benefit from the special effects expertise of Eiji
Tsuburaya who, sadly, died in 1970. Ishiro Honda was to make only
two more monster films himself - 'Yog - Monster From Space' in 1970
was his last 'regular' film but he came out of retirement in 1975
to direct 'MekaGojira No Gyakushu' which was a celebration of twenty
years of monster movies
|
|