Rabid
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So I'm gonna come and write the first review tomorrow but I thought I'd finally go ahead and start this thread up!
Godzilla as a series has always held a special place for me. I grew up with the 1998 American movie (which I still have a soft spot for despite all the flaws) and watched it religiously on VHS when I was a child (I must have been about five when it came out) to the point of driving my parents nuts. At the time I was big into dinosaurs too so the whole fact that Godzilla looked like a giant spiked dinosaur was awesome!
As I grew up though I never really saw anything else. Sure, I'd occasionally catch something online when I was old enough to have semi-regular internet access and such (which at the time was mostly at school, we're talking circa 2005+) but really there was no real way for me to access anything else Godzilla related. Even today getting most of the movies, even the more recent ones, is almost impossible here in the UK. They're just not released.
There was also the stigma of it, I suppose. They're just dudes in suits! The effects are bad! and all the usual complaints the average teenager will have when they look at something that isn't big shiny modern CGI. But again, as I grew up and my interest grew I started really look into things and I found a whole world of fantastic and talented people who take the art of building sets and costume design to the next level and exceptionally fun movies.
The Godzilla series, for those who don't know, is broken up into three (technically four) 'era's' of movies, most if not all of which ignore every movie after the 1954 one in the Showa period and carry on from there, beyond the Showa period itself obviously.
Showa - The movies from 1954 to 1975. Characterised after the first two (very serious) movies by the increasing push towards child-friendly flicks.
Heisei - The moves from 1985 to 1995. Characterised by the much better effects (given the ten-year gap) and the ongoing storyline. Showa also has this but it's a little more explicit in these movies as things are referenced from prior movies in most cases.
Millennium - The movies from 1999 to 2004. Again, another step up in production and with much more CGI being used (though "CGI" had been used as far back as the first movie in a sense, just not with computers). All but two of the movies aren't linked, each with their own stories.
Then you have the 1998 movie, Legendaries recent Monsterverse, the anime movies and Shin Godzilla. I won't count those though.
In this case and for the sake of this thread I managed to pick up Criterion's limited boxed set of all of the Showa movies - which given the impossibility of getting almost any of the Japanese movies in the UK was a huge standout. And so that's what I'm reviewing, starting with the original 1954 movie!
Feel free to ask questions or whatever, too!
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