Please note: This review is for the original Japanese subbed version
And it gets weirder. An obvious inspiration for the film Mars Attacks! as it almost follows the plot points beat for beat.
Godzilla is a good guy. Until he's no longer a good guy. This film is wacky and has very strange moments like the last film. Following the trend of giving the monsters human traits, Godzilla's little dance number was so damn jarring that it took me back as I chuckled at the absurdity of what was on my screen.
This film has an interesting plot, but the monsters are hardly on screen. But, when they are. It's a mad mix of an epic showdown and stupid moments. Like Godzilla's giant leap onto Ghidrah that he can suddenly do. The "X-People" are odd and campy, and their goals are so stupid. The technology is advanced, yet so primitive. Funny to see the 60s try to realize future tech, while also trying to build in an easy weakness. This leads to the ending and it is left open-ended like its predecessor and it still is as painful. Especially since it introduces something as massive as humanoid extraterrestrial life into the series. But then surprise is forgotten about in the next movie, and I assume the rest as well.
As I praised the last film for its leap in set design, miniature scope, and how the destruction felt more real. Here, they take it back to bland open spaces with very little variety in destructible setpieces. But I feel like the greenscreen has been vastly improved.
Overall, campy sci-fi elements meet kid-friendly Godzilla. Weird, wacky, and stupid. It's bad, but not that bad.
Review by Corrupted NoobieVIP 9BlockedParent2021-02-06T11:44:32Z
Please note: This review is for the original Japanese subbed version
And it gets weirder. An obvious inspiration for the film Mars Attacks! as it almost follows the plot points beat for beat.
Godzilla is a good guy. Until he's no longer a good guy. This film is wacky and has very strange moments like the last film. Following the trend of giving the monsters human traits, Godzilla's little dance number was so damn jarring that it took me back as I chuckled at the absurdity of what was on my screen.
This film has an interesting plot, but the monsters are hardly on screen. But, when they are. It's a mad mix of an epic showdown and stupid moments. Like Godzilla's giant leap onto Ghidrah that he can suddenly do. The "X-People" are odd and campy, and their goals are so stupid. The technology is advanced, yet so primitive. Funny to see the 60s try to realize future tech, while also trying to build in an easy weakness. This leads to the ending and it is left open-ended like its predecessor and it still is as painful. Especially since it introduces something as massive as humanoid extraterrestrial life into the series. But then surprise is forgotten about in the next movie, and I assume the rest as well.
As I praised the last film for its leap in set design, miniature scope, and how the destruction felt more real. Here, they take it back to bland open spaces with very little variety in destructible setpieces. But I feel like the greenscreen has been vastly improved.
Overall, campy sci-fi elements meet kid-friendly Godzilla. Weird, wacky, and stupid. It's bad, but not that bad.
4/10