Godzilla

Okay, I watched this several days ago, and honestly didn’t have much to say about it. I enjoyed it, but I found it pretty perfunctory. The most interesting aspect to me was the backstory of the 1950s nuclear tests secretly being attempts to kill Godzilla - fun worldbuilding!

The characters are pretty generic, buoyed by good performances from Elizabeth Olsen and Bryan Cranston, in particular. Ken Watanabe gets the instant classic “let them fight.” Unfortunately, I didn’t care much for Ford, or Aaron Taylor-Johnson’s portrayal of him.

It was fine! I enjoyed it! But not a lot to chew on long-term.


Kong: Skull Island

This one, on the other hand, was a hoot. The movie has personality to spare, taking full advantage of its Vietnam-era setting, from the character archetypes in play to the musical choices. That setting also gives it a little more thematic weight, as the Americans showing up and bombing the crap out of Skull Island sets the film’s events into motion.

Kudos to the filmmakers for daring to set a number of the action pieces in daylight - a confident move.

Both movies have a good thoroughline of the MUTOs being fairly amoral, not necessarily “good” or “evil.” Between the two Hero Monsters, Kong comes off as smarter and more empathetic, while Godzilla is more of a force of nature.

My biggest complaint? It took me about 20 minutes to figure out why the movie looked so weird before I concluded that it must have been filmed with 3D in mind. I really hate that.

  • ValueSubtractedOPMA
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    3 days ago

    And of course, the Vietnam War is the perfect setting when you’re not looking to make jingoistic propaganda.

    After I made this post, I read that Apocalypse Now was a direct influence of this, and…well yeah, that tracks.

    • StillPaisleyCatM
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      3 days ago

      Here’s a meta take on that.

      Many of the Showa era films that made it into English audiences were produced during the Vietnam War — and it’s been relatively recently revealed that a number of the male voice actors who did the English language dubs in Hong Kong were moonlighting broadcasters and reporters, and even a military attaché at Government House.

      Stuart Varney, then working for the public broadcaster Radio Hong Kong but more recently well known on Fox News, was one of them.

      A good number of those voices — mainly British and Canadians putting on a ‘mid Atlantic accent’ - were otherwise in Vietnam and Cambodia covering the wars. Some of them worked for the major US networks and were producing the film that brought the horrors of the war into America’s living rooms.

      https://wikizilla.org/wiki/Category:Films_dubbed_in_Hong_Kong