This keeps getting weirder and better whenever I watch it.
As I continue to slowly wade through all of the Godzilla movies, it's getting harder to distinguish memories of one from the other. This is not the case with "Godzilla Vs. Hedorah", however. This movie features Hedorah, a monster who actually sucks smog from smokestacks, seeps and pukes pollution on anything and everything, and manages to morph from slow-moving slug to odd flying creature. Oh, and this is the movie that features Godzilla flying by using his atomic breath as a thruster.
The people that made this movie were likely drug-addled at the time. There are many inexplicable moments like animated scenes that pop into the movie out of nowhere and disappear just as quickly. There is a scene where everyone at a party suddenly appears to have fish heads. Hedorah flies over people which melts their heads into a blue goo. There's a psychic little boy a score featuring hippies playing awful '60s music and an anvil-heavy environmental message.
I tried my best to relay just how strange this is but you really have to see it to appreciate its B-movie badness.
After the dreadful "All Monsters Attack," things could only go uphill again for Godzilla, and "Godzilla vs Hedorah" is indeed a clear improvement. There's certainly something like a halfway coherent plot again, for a change. The story's environmental theme also serves as the foundation for an appropriate ecological message. And the kiddie focus of its predecessors has also been scaled back somewhat; the movie is correspondingly much more serious in terms of its subject. However, "Godzilla vs. Hedorah" is still not a complete success. The monster action bored me too much for that. Hedorah is also not necessarily my favorite antagonist in the series. Still, it was enough for a somewhat entertaining movie.
Please note: This review is for the original Japanese subbed version.
Finally, Godzilla has come back to his horror roots. Even if it's only briefly and not himself being the terror, it is so good to see this use the kid-oriented previous films to its advantage in terms of shock value. Not to mention having one of the main characters be a kid and seeing them go through these horrific events.
While the early 70s psychedelic themes are odd and jarring at first. I got used to them as it conveys the more adult undertones of abuse of the world, let alone on one's self. The cartoon inserts are also great and are meant to transition when we see Hedorah evolve into its next stage of life. These also show, directly how we as humans help them grow. It's fantastic.
Now, the horror aspect as I said is brief. It's only in the first half of the movie where we see some serious scenes. The polluted sludge flying into homes and melting the people inside. A cat is shown almost having drowned in it. An infant is also shown crying over everyone else in the proceeding shots as it is neck-deep in the goo. Not only that, but even when the monster flies by and expels its toxic gas, it melts people's flesh away to the bone. We see this through the eyes of a young kid who stumbles upon the scene while running away. Real-world horror with a dash of fantasy is what Godzilla is all about.
I hardly care if Godzilla doesn't do much until the very end either because everything else going on is just too good. Besides the ending that is. The final battle is so terribly stupid that it almost ruined the great movie that was leading to this point. The only other major complaint I have is the music choices aside from the main theme. The silly music that plays throughout is out of place against the serious first half of the movie. However, the sound editing is lovely. Especially when the main kid sees Godzilla for the first time on a rollercoaster and the music just stops dead for a second or two. It added so much to the fear that Godzilla still holds. Even if by the end he was the same stupid hero we know and love?
This movie lacked the budget of other Godzilla movies and you don't get all that much cityscape destruction. So, if you're looking for a monster battle movie with Godzilla, I'd skip this one. But if you want to see a great new evil take the helm of what Godzilla was in the beginning, it's worth a look as it still stands up today with its message.
7/10
See my Godzilla ranked list: https://trakt.tv/users/corruptednoobie/lists/godzilla-films-ranked?sort=rank,asc
Shout by TorgoVIP 6BlockedParent2022-01-28T13:33:16Z
Godzilla, now a hero to Japanese children everywhere, must fight a trash monster from the sea. Yeah. On paper this one has the markings of another "bad" Showa-era Godzilla flick, save for one factor: psychedelia.
This is where the Godzilla franchise officially dropped acid. It's fuckin' nuts and I love every second of it.