
The original Gojira is a dark serious metaphor to the dangers of nuclear weapons. It is a disaster movie that takes the form of the attack of a giant monster the country is powerless to stop.
The film opens with a small team of people investigating an abandoned ship floating in Tokyo bay. After finding some odd pieces of research a large explosion can be heard, the sea starts boiling and the Tokyo Bay Aqua-Line is suddenly flooded by a strange red liquid. From here the action moves to the Japanese Government as they go from meeting to meeting, their inaction and unwillingness to take action due to bureaucracy over who should be responsible is paralleled as a large creature begins to move first up the river (the pile up of boats directly referencing the tsunami) before coming on land in its second form.
The second form of Godzilla has an unusual but somewhat chilling look, a creature clearly not built to walk on land as blood comes out of its gills and it wobbles about yet it continues to devastate the area while the Government continues to try and find out whose jurisdiction this falls under.
Godzilla here is portrayed as a rapidly evolving creature, once more paralleling the slow movements of the Government. Times where it could have been dealt with then and there prevented by inaction resulting in the time when they were willing to gun it down, it no longer being effective.
The 4th form of Godzilla which is the main one seen in the film is a terrifying beast, drawing once more from the original concepts of the beast. This form is black covered in radiation scars and an almost blood red glow coming off it. This beast comes off as a nightmarish mutation rather than some large dinosaur.
The most harrowing scene comes when Godzilla/gojira (in a nice touch they use both its names, with Godzilla openly being what the Americans refer to it as) uses its atomic breath. The music switches more to a funereal dirge the track called “who will know our tragedy” as its lower jaw splits open and hits dorsal fins glow purple, suddenly black smoke spews from Godzilla’s mouth before it’s replaced by flames and massive sections of Tokyo are engulfed in flames evoking images of the fire bombings in WW2 as well as the nuke.
Shin Godzilla is a very different beast to the American monsterverse films. While they follow the later era Godzilla VS monster films this one is a much slower and haunting film resembling the original more. It is also charged with political commentary with many parts of the dialog coming out as condemning the current nature of Japanese politics. Sadly that part will not be as strongly resonating with western audiences due to lack of knowledge or reference point for them but the film is still written in a way that is enjoyable if dark and a very interesting contrast to the American ones.
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