Filmed in stark black and white, Gojira tells the story of a giant, terrifying, fire-breathing monster who is awaked from millions of hears of hibernation by American atom bomb testing in the Pacific Ocean. The monster attacks a number of ships and makes a brief land appearance, before coming ashore in Tokyo and destroying the entire city during an unstoppable rampage. The monster is finally defeated when a Japanese scientist (Takashi Shimura[?]) uses an experimental underwater weapon to destroy it. The scientist intentionally sacrifices his life while detrying Gojira, because he believes his invention is too terrible to be used by humanity.
The monster Gojira is widely seen as an allegory for the atomic bomb: an unstoppable force, powered by radiation, that lays waste to Japan in a manner similar to what occurred in World War II; this movie was made only nine years after Japan's defeat. Unlike later movies in the "giant monster" genre, Gojira was filmed in a completely serious manner, and it has lost little of its power in the years since. Ishiro Honda[?], the director, was a second-unit director on several of Akira Kurosawa's films, and his stark black-and-white cinematography seems more realistic, harsh, and terrifying than many of the later color Godzilla movies.
Gojira was released in America under the title Godzilla, and the giant monster would be known by that name ever after. Several minutes' worth of footage was deleted from the American version of the film, and new footage of the actor Raymond Burr was inserted into the film, presumably so that American audiences would have an American hero to identify with.
original title | translation | director | special effects |
Gojira | Godzilla | Ishiro Honda[?] | Eiji Tsubaraya |
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